Deciphering microbiome and fungi-bacteria interactions in chronic wound infections using metagenomic sequencing.

IF 3.7 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Qingqing Wang, Meixia Wang, Yu Chen, Qing Miao, Wenting Jin, Yuyan Ma, Jue Pan, Bijie Hu
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Abstract

Purpose: Chronic wounds caused by infections impose a considerable global healthcare burden. The microbial features of these infections and possible correlations between bacteria and fungi may influence wound healing. However, metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) analyses of these features remain sparse. Therefore, we performed mNGS on chronic wound infection samples to investigate features and correlations between the bacteriome and mycobiome in 66 patients (28: chronic wounds; 38: non-chronic wounds).

Methods: Microbial community characteristics in patients with wound infections, microbiome-systemic inflammation associations, and bacteria-fungi correlations were analyzed.

Results: Infections constituted the primary cause of wounds in this study. Nontuberculous mycobacteria (23%) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (13%) were the most common pathogens associated with chronic wounds, whereas Staphylococcus aureus (15%) was the most prevalent in non-chronic wound infections. Patients with chronic wound infections had a higher abundance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa than those without chronic wounds. Microbes with a high relative abundance in chronic wound infections were less significantly associated with plasma inflammatory factors than those in non-chronic wound infections. Additionally, a positive correlation between Candida glabrata and P. aeruginosa and an association between Malassezia restricta and anaerobic species were detected in patients with chronic wound infections.

Conclusion: Our results further support the hypothesis that P. aeruginosa is a microbial biomarker of chronic wound infection regardless of the causative pathogens. Moreover, we propose a positive correlation between C. glabrata and P. aeruginosa in chronic wound infections, which advances the current understanding of fungi-bacteria correlations in patients with chronic wound infections.

利用元基因组测序破解慢性伤口感染中的微生物组和真菌与细菌之间的相互作用。
目的:感染引起的慢性伤口给全球医疗保健造成了相当大的负担。这些感染的微生物特征以及细菌和真菌之间可能存在的关联可能会影响伤口愈合。然而,有关这些特征的元基因组新一代测序(mNGS)分析仍然很少。因此,我们对慢性伤口感染样本进行了 mNGS 测序,以研究 66 例患者(28 例:慢性伤口;38 例:非慢性伤口)的细菌群和真菌生物群的特征及其相互关系:方法:分析伤口感染患者的微生物群落特征、微生物群落与系统炎症的相关性以及细菌与真菌的相关性:结果:在这项研究中,感染是造成伤口的主要原因。非结核分枝杆菌(23%)和结核分枝杆菌(13%)是与慢性伤口相关的最常见病原体,而金黄色葡萄球菌(15%)则是非慢性伤口感染中最常见的病原体。与无慢性伤口的患者相比,慢性伤口感染患者体内铜绿假单胞菌的含量更高。与非慢性伤口感染的微生物相比,慢性伤口感染中相对含量较高的微生物与血浆炎症因子的关系不那么明显。此外,在慢性伤口感染患者中还发现了白色念珠菌与铜绿假单胞菌之间的正相关性,以及限制马拉色菌与厌氧菌之间的相关性:结论:我们的研究结果进一步支持了铜绿假单胞菌是慢性伤口感染的微生物生物标志物这一假设,而与致病病原体无关。此外,我们还提出了在慢性伤口感染中碳水蚤和铜绿假单胞菌之间的正相关性,这推进了目前对慢性伤口感染患者真菌-细菌相关性的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.40
自引率
2.20%
发文量
138
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: EJCMID is an interdisciplinary journal devoted to the publication of communications on infectious diseases of bacterial, viral and parasitic origin.
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