| Literature DB >> 33613471 |
Jiancheng Qi1, Dongjie Cai1, Yaocheng Cui1, Tianyu Tan1, Huawei Zou2, Wei Guo3, Yue Xie1, Hongrui Guo1, Shi-Yi Chen4, Xiaoping Ma1, Liping Gou1, Hengmin Cui1, Yi Geng1, Ming Zhang4, Gang Ye1, Zhijun Zhong1, Zhihua Ren1, Yanchun Hu1, Ya Wang1, Junliang Deng1, Shumin Yu1, Suizhong Cao1, Metha Wanapat5, Jing Fang1, Zhisheng Wang2, Zhicai Zuo1.
Abstract
It is widely accepted that maintenance of microbial diversity is essential for the health of the respiratory tract; however, there are limited reports on the correlation between starvation and respiratory tract microbial diversity. In the present study, saline/β-hydroxybutyric acid (BHBA) intravenous injection after dietary restriction was used to imitate different degrees of starvation. A total of 13 healthy male yaks were imposed to different dietary restrictions and intravenous injections, and their nasopharyngeal microbiota profiles were obtained by metagenomic shotgun sequencing. In healthy yaks, the main dominant phyla were Proteobacteria (33.0%), Firmicutes (22.6%), Bacteroidetes (17.2%), and Actinobacteria (13.2%); the most dominated species was Clostridium botulinum (10.8%). It was found that 9 days of dietary restriction and 2 days of BHBA injection (imitating severe starvation) significantly decreased the microbial diversity and disturbed its structure and functional composition, which increased the risk of respiratory diseases. This study also implied that oral bacteria played an important role in maintaining nasopharynx microbial homeostasis. In this study, the correlation between starvation and nasopharynx microbial diversity and its potential mechanism was investigated for the first time, providing new ideas for the prevention of respiratory diseases.Entities:
Keywords: metagenomics; microbial diversity; nasopharynx microbiota; respiratory tract; starvation; yak
Year: 2021 PMID: 33613471 PMCID: PMC7892611 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.630280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640