| Literature DB >> 33850462 |
Dongzi Lin1,2, Xuezhi Wang2, Yanyun Li1, Wei Wang2, Yumei Li3, Xiaolin Yu3, Bingyao Lin2, Yinwen Chen3, Chunyan Lei2, Xueying Zhang1, Xilin Zhang2, Juan Huang1, Bihua Lin1, Weiqing Yang1, Jie Zhou2, Jincheng Zeng1, Xinguang Liu1.
Abstract
The prevalence of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) strains makes disease control more complicated, which is the main cause of death in tuberculosis (TB) patients. Early detection and timely standard treatment are the key to current prevention and control of drug-resistant TB. In recent years, despite the continuous advancement in drug-resistant TB diagnostic technology, the needs for clinical rapid and accurate diagnosis are still not fully met. With the development of sequencing technology, the research of human microecology has been intensified. This study aims to use 16 rRNA sequencing technology to detect and analyze upper respiratory flora of TB patients with anti-TB drug sensitivity (DS, n = 55), monoresistance isoniazide (MR-INH, n = 33), monoresistance rifampin (MR-RFP, n = 12), multidrug resistance (MDR, n = 26) and polyresistance (PR, n = 39) in southern China. Potential microbial diagnostic markers for different types of TB drug resistance are searched by screening differential flora, which provides certain guiding significance for drug resistance diagnosis and clinical drug use of TB. The results showed that the pulmonary microenvironment of TB patients was more susceptible to infection by external pathogens, and the infection of different drug-resistant Mtb leads to changes in different flora. Importantly, seven novel microorganisms (Leptotrichia, Granulicatella, Campylobacter, Delfitia, Kingella, Chlamydophila, Bordetella) were identified by 16S rRNA sequencing as diagnostic markers for different drug resistance types of TB. Leptotrichia, Granulicatella, Campylobacter were potential diagnostic marker for TB patients with INH single-resistance. Delftia was a potential diagnostic marker for TB patients with RFP single drug-resistance. Kingella and Chlamydophila can be used as diagnostic markers for TB patients with PR. Bordetella can be used as a potential diagnostic marker for identification of TB patients with MDR. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA sequencing; Tuberculosis; drug resistance; sputum microbiota
Year: 2021 PMID: 33850462 PMCID: PMC8040397 DOI: 10.7150/ijms.53492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Med Sci ISSN: 1449-1907 Impact factor: 3.738
Figure 4LEfSe analysis of sputum flora differences between samples. (A) Differential display of flora in MR-INH and DS groups. (B) Differential display of flora in MR-RFP and DS groups. (C) Differential display of flora in MDR and DS groups. (D) Differential display of flora in PR and DS groups. The classification level tree displayed by cladogram describes the hierarchical relationship of all the flora from phylum to genus (successively ordered from the inner circle to the outer circle) in the sample community. The node size corresponds to the average relative abundance of the flora, red and green respectively indicate flora with high abundance, and the difference is significant. The letters make the names of the flora with significant differences between the groups.
Relative abundance of differential genus in MDR and DS groups
| Identity | Relative abundance (x±s, %) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DS | MDR | ||
| Delftia | 2.12±0.05 | 7.54±0.07 | 0.0023 |
| Kingella | 0.02±0.00 | 0.06±0.00 | 0.0046 |
| Ralstonia | 2.71±0.10 | 10.63±0.10 | 0.0187 |
| Chlamydophila | 8.249e-004±0.00 | 3.708e-003±0.00 | 0.0329 |
Basic information for clinical samples included in this trial
| DS-TB | MR-INH | MR-RFP | MDR | PR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number (%) | 55 (45.45%) | 33 (20.00%) | 12 (7.27%) | 26 (15.76%) | 39 (23.64%) |
| Age (median±SD, range) | 37.45±13.89 (16-67) | 43.61±14.16 (19-62) | 42.67±6.429 (38-50) | 40.73±14.77 (21-68) | 43.96±12.08 (23-63) |
| Male | 37 (67.27%) | 22 (66.67%) | 7 (58.33%) | 16 (61.54%) | 25 (64.10%) |
| Female | 18 (32.73%) | 11 (33.33%) | 5 (41.67%) | 10 (38.46%) | 14 (35.90%) |
Relative abundance of differential genus in MR-INH and DS groups
| Identity | Relative abundance (x±s, %) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DS | MR-INH | ||
| Leptotrichia | 0.51±0.01 | 1.70±2.32 | 0.0016 |
| Granulicatella | 0.81±0.01 | 2.32±0.04 | 0.0013 |
| Campylobacter | 0.02±0.00 | 0.06±0.00 | 0.0014 |
Relative abundance of differential genus in MR-RFP and DS groups
| Identity | Relative abundance (x±s, %) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DS | MR-RFP | ||
| Delftia | 2.12±0.05 | 6.82±0.10 | 0.03 |
Relative abundance of differential genus in PR and DS groups
| Identity | Relative abundance (x±s, %) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DS | PR | ||
| Delftia | 2.12±0.05 | 8.25±0.08 | < 0.0001 |
| Ralstonia | 2.71±0.10 | 11.44±0.12 | 0.0005 |
| Bordetella | 1.155e-003±0.00 | 0.02±0.00 | 0.0324 |