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Airway Microbiota Shifts During Stable Cystic Fibrosis Treated With Inhaled Antibiotics Are Associated With Exacerbations And Disease Progression [Meeting Abstract]
Sulaiman, I; Beatty, J; Scaglione, B; Wu, BG; Wang, J; Scott, AS; Giusti, R; Amoroso, N; DiMango, E; Fiel, SB; Berdella, M; Walker, P; Condos, R; Segal, LN
ISI:000400372507409
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 2591342
EVALUATION OF MICROBIOME RESILIENCE IN CYSTIC FIBROSIS [Meeting Abstract]
Scaglione, B; Wang, J; Wu, B; Lesko, M; Li, Y; Scott, A; Giusti, R; Amoroso, N; DiMango, E; Fiel, S; Berdella, M; Walker, P; Condos, R; Segal, LN
ISI:000384815300451
ISSN: 1099-0496
CID: 2321832
Biologic phenotyping of the human small airway epithelial response to cigarette smoking
Tilley, Ann E; O'Connor, Timothy P; Hackett, Neil R; Strulovici-Barel, Yael; Salit, Jacqueline; Amoroso, Nancy; Zhou, Xi Kathy; Raman, Tina; Omberg, Larsson; Clark, Andrew; Mezey, Jason; Crystal, Ronald G
BACKGROUND: The first changes associated with smoking are in the small airway epithelium (SAE). Given that smoking alters SAE gene expression, but only a fraction of smokers develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), we hypothesized that assessment of SAE genome-wide gene expression would permit biologic phenotyping of the smoking response, and that a subset of healthy smokers would have a "COPD-like" SAE transcriptome. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: SAE (10th-12th generation) was obtained via bronchoscopy of healthy nonsmokers, healthy smokers and COPD smokers and microarray analysis was used to identify differentially expressed genes. Individual responsiveness to smoking was quantified with an index representing the % of smoking-responsive genes abnormally expressed (I(SAE)), with healthy smokers grouped into "high" and "low" responders based on the proportion of smoking-responsive genes up- or down-regulated in each smoker. Smokers demonstrated significant variability in SAE transcriptome with I(SAE) ranging from 2.9 to 51.5%. While the SAE transcriptome of "low" responder healthy smokers differed from both "high" responders and smokers with COPD, the transcriptome of the "high" responder healthy smokers was indistinguishable from COPD smokers. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: The SAE transcriptome can be used to classify clinically healthy smokers into subgroups with lesser and greater responses to cigarette smoking, even though these subgroups are indistinguishable by clinical criteria. This identifies a group of smokers with a "COPD-like" SAE transcriptome.
PMCID:3145669
PMID: 21829517
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 161141