Association Between Ocular Microbiomes of Children and Their Siblings and Parents.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Xiangtian Ling, Yuzhou Zhang, Christine H T Bui, Hei-Nga Chan, Pancy O S Tam, Yu Peng, Xiu Juan Zhang, Charlene C Yim, Ka Wai Kam, Wai Kit Chu, Patrick Ip, Alvin L Young, Stephen Kwok-Wing Tsui, Clement C Tham, Chi Pui Pang, Li Jia Chen, Jason C Yam
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to investigate the association of ocular microbiomes between children and their parents and siblings.

Methods: An observational study was conducted at family units, involving 114 children and 131 parents, with conjunctival swab samples collected and analyzed using 16S rDNA high-throughput sequencing. Comparative analyses, diversity indexes, and distance measures were used to assess microbial community differences.

Results: Children's ocular microbiomes are more similar to their parents than unrelated adults (P < 0.001 for both Bray-Curtis and Jensen-Shannon distances). Additionally, children's ocular microbiomes exhibited greater similarities with their siblings than with unrelated children (P < 0.001). However, couples who lived in the same family showed no more similarity in the composition of their ocular microbiota than did unrelated individuals (Bray-Curtis distance P = 0.7; Jensen-Shannon distance P = 0.47). Four genera, Aquabacterium, Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus and Streptococcus, were highly shared between parental and children's ocular microbiomes (>70% shared rate). A relatively weak correlation was observed between the age of child and the similarity comparing child's and adults' microbiomes. The interquartile range of parental contribution to a child's ocular microbiome was 11.2% (first quartile) to 33.0% (third quartile), suggesting a substantial majority attributable to unknown factors.

Conclusions: Children's ocular microbiome is associated with that of their siblings and their parents, with this association showing a small tendency to increase with the age of the children. These findings highlight the importance of considering familial and environmental contexts in future microbiological research.

儿童眼部微生物群与其兄弟姐妹和父母的关系。
目的:本研究旨在探讨儿童与父母和兄弟姐妹之间的眼部微生物组的关系。方法:以家庭为单位进行观察性研究,114名儿童和131名家长采集结膜拭子样本,采用16S rDNA高通量测序进行分析。采用比较分析法、多样性指数法和距离法评价微生物群落差异。结果:儿童的眼部微生物组与父母的相似度高于无亲缘关系的成年人(布雷-柯蒂斯和詹森-香农距离的P < 0.001)。此外,儿童的眼部微生物组与兄弟姐妹的相似性大于非亲属儿童(P < 0.001)。然而,生活在同一家庭的夫妇在他们的眼睛微生物群组成上没有比非亲属个体更多的相似性(布雷-柯蒂斯距离P = 0.7;詹森-香农距离P = 0.47)。水杆菌、棒状杆菌、葡萄球菌和链球菌4属在父母和儿童的眼部微生物群中高度共享(共享率约为70%)。观察到儿童年龄与儿童和成人微生物组相似性之间存在相对较弱的相关性。父母对儿童眼部微生物群的贡献的四分位数范围为11.2%(第一个四分位数)至33.0%(第三个四分位数),这表明绝大多数归因于未知因素。结论:儿童的眼部微生物群与其兄弟姐妹和父母的相关,且随着儿童年龄的增长,这种关联有轻微的增加趋势。这些发现强调了在未来的微生物研究中考虑家族和环境背景的重要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
339
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science (IOVS), published as ready online, is a peer-reviewed academic journal of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO). IOVS features original research, mostly pertaining to clinical and laboratory ophthalmology and vision research in general.
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