A Different Microbiome Gene Repertoire in the Airways of Cystic Fibrosis Patients with Severe Lung Disease.

Int J Mol Sci

Territorial and Production Systems Sustainability Department, ENEA, Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development, Casaccia Research Center, Rome 00123, Italy.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers used next-generation sequencing to study airway microbiota in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, revealing insights into microbial gene functions and their relation to lung disease stages.
  • The study performed sputum shotgun metagenome sequencing on 12 CF patients, identifying key metabolic pathways related to bacterial movement, antibiotic resistance, and virulence genes in relation to pulmonary function.
  • Findings suggest that patients with severe CF have a microbiome enriched in genes that promote microbial colonization and resistance, indicating a link to multidrug-resistant communities in severe lung disease cases.

Article Abstract

In recent years, next-generation sequencing (NGS) was employed to decipher the structure and composition of the microbiota of the airways in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. However, little is still known about the overall gene functions harbored by the resident microbial populations and which specific genes are associated with various stages of CF lung disease. In the present study, we aimed to identify the microbial gene repertoire of CF microbiota in twelve patients with severe and normal/mild lung disease by performing sputum shotgun metagenome sequencing. The abundance of metabolic pathways encoded by microbes inhabiting CF airways was reconstructed from the metagenome. We identified a set of metabolic pathways differently distributed in patients with different pulmonary function; namely, pathways related to bacterial chemotaxis and flagellar assembly, as well as genes encoding efflux-mediated antibiotic resistance mechanisms and virulence-related genes. The results indicated that the microbiome of CF patients with low pulmonary function is enriched in virulence-related genes and in genes encoding efflux-mediated antibiotic resistance mechanisms. Overall, the microbiome of severely affected adults with CF seems to encode different mechanisms for the facilitation of microbial colonization and persistence in the lung, consistent with the characteristics of multidrug-resistant microbial communities that are commonly observed in patients with severe lung disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5578044PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18081654DOI Listing

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