Alterations in the conjunctival surface bacterial microbiome in bacterial keratitis patients

Adult DNA, Bacterial Male 0301 basic medicine Bacteriological Techniques Bacteria Microbiota Sequence Analysis, DNA Middle Aged Polymerase Chain Reaction Eye Infections, Bacterial Healthy Volunteers 3. Good health Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Humans Female Corneal Ulcer Conjunctiva Aged
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2020.108418 Publication Date: 2020-12-23T12:35:24Z
ABSTRACT
Microbial keratitis is an infectious disease of the eye, in which the cornea is inflamed. Under severe conditions, keratitis can lead to significant loss of vision and enucleation of the eye. Ocular trauma is the major risk factor causing keratitis and microorganisms viz., bacteria, fungi, viruses are the causative agents. The current study characterized the conjunctival bacterial microbiomes of healthy individuals and individuals with bacterial keratitis (BK) and assessed whether ocular microbiome dysbiosis is prevalent in BK patients. Ocular bacterial microbiomes were generated from the conjunctival swabs of healthy controls (HC-SW) and conjunctival swabs (BK-SW) and corneal scrapings (BK-CR) of BK patients using V3-V4 amplicon sequencing and data analysed using QIIME and R software. The Alpha diversity indices, diversity and abundance of different phyla and genera, heat map analysis, NMDS plots and inferred functional pathway analysis clearly discriminated the bacterial microbiomes of conjunctival swabs of healthy controls from that of BK patients. Preponderance of negative interactions in the hub genera were observed in BK-CR and BK-SW compared to HC-SW. In addition, a consistent increase in the abundance of pathogenic bacteria, as inferred from published literature, was observed in the conjunctiva of BK patients compared to HC and this may be related to causing or exacerbating ocular surface inflammation. This is the first study demonstrating dysbiosis in the ocular bacterial microbiome of conjunctiva of bacterial keratitis patients compared to the eye of healthy controls. The bacterial microbiome associated with the corneal scrapings of keratitis individuals is also described for the first time.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (90)
CITATIONS (30)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....