Nasopharyngeal dysbiosis precedes the development of lower respiratory tract infections in young infants, a longitudinal infant cohort study

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Authors

Lapidot, Rotem
Faits, Tyler
Ismail, Arshad
Allam, Mushal
Khumalo, Zamantungwa Thobeka Happiness
MacLeod, William
Kwenda, Geoffrey
Mupila, Zachariah
Nakazwe, Ruth
Segrè, Daniel

Journal Title

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Volume Title

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F1000 Research Ltd

Abstract

BACKGROUND Infants suffering from lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) have distinct nasopharyngeal (NP) microbiome profiles that correlate with severity of disease. Whether these profiles precede the infection or are a consequence of it, is unknown. In order to answer this question, longitudinal studies are needed. METHODS We conducted a retrospective analysis of NP samples collected in a longitudinal birth cohort study of Zambian mother-infant pairs. Samples were collected every two weeks from 1-week through 14-weeks of age. Ten of the infants in the cohort who developed LRTI were matched 1:3 with healthy comparators. We completed 16S rRNA gene sequencing on the samples each of these infants contributed and compared the NP microbiome of the healthy infants to infants who developed LRTI. RESULTS The infant NP microbiome maturation was characterized by transitioning from Staphylococcus dominant to respiratory-genera dominant profiles during the first three months of life, similar to what is described in the literature. Interestingly, infants who developed LRTI had distinct NP microbiome characteristics before infection, in most cases as early as the first week of life. Their NP microbiome was characterized by the presence of Novosphingobium, Delftia, high relative abundance of Anaerobacillus, Bacillus, and low relative abundance of Dolosigranulum, compared to the healthy controls. Mothers of infants with LRTI also had low relative abundance of Dolosigranulum in their baseline samples compared to mothers of infants that did not develop an LRTI. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that specific characteristics of the NP microbiome precede LRTI in young infants and may be present in their mothers as well. Early dysbiosis may play a role in the causal pathway leading to LRTI or could be a marker of underlying immunological, environmental, or genetic characteristics that predispose to LRTI.

Description

DATA AVAILABITY STATEMENT: GitHub. Infant_Nasopharyngeal_Dysbiosis. DOI: https://github.com/tfaits/Infant_Nasopharyngeal_Dysbiosis This project contains the following underlying data: - All code, processed data, and the sample information metadata - Taxon counts tables are called "species.RDS", "genus.RDS", and "phylum.RDS". For strain/subspecies-level counts, "PathoScopeTable.txt" has the unfiltered/unprocessed outputs from PathoScope. The raw and processed sequencing data from this study are available in the SRA repository, under NIH Sequence Read Archive, BioProject: PRJNA817266.

Keywords

Dysbiosis, Nasopharyngeal microbiome, Longitudinal cohort study, Lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being

Citation

Lapidot, R., Faits, T., Ismail, A et al. Nasopharyngeal Dysbiosis Precedes the Development of Lower Respiratory Tract Infections in Young Infants, a Longitudinal Infant Cohort Study. Gates Open Research 2024, 6:48. https://doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13561.2.