| Literature DB >> 31276030 |
Davide Borroni1,2,3,4, Vito Romano1,3, Stephen B Kaye1,3, Tobi Somerville1,3, Luca Napoli5, Adriano Fasolo4, Paola Gallon4, Diego Ponzin4, Alfonso Esposito6, Stefano Ferrari4.
Abstract
Less than 1% of all microorganisms of the available environmental microbiota can be cultured with the currently available techniques. Metagenomics is a new methodology of high-throughput DNA sequencing, able to provide taxonomic and functional profiles of microbial communities without the necessity to culture microbes in the laboratory. Metagenomics opens to a 'hypothesis-free' approach, giving important details for future research and treatment of ocular diseases in ophthalmology, such as ocular infection and ocular surface diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cornea; eye; metagenomics; microbiome; ocular surface; ophthalmology; sequencing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31276030 PMCID: PMC6557081 DOI: 10.1136/bmjophth-2018-000248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Ophthalmol ISSN: 2397-3269
Figure 1Pie charts displaying the relative proportions of taxa at the phylum level and at the genus level in healthy eye microbiome (according to Dong et al 15 [15]).
Figure 2The process towards genetic-guided treatment in the field of ophthalmology. The figure indicates different procedures of sample collection, nucleic acid extraction, sample preparation, sequencing, bioinformatics, analysis and report writing, indication to the eye surgeon for specific drug usage for specific microorganism and metagenomic-guided eye treatment on the patient. Being highly specific and cost-effective, metagenomics could be potentially used in ophthalmology in the near future.