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HIV-induced immunosuppression is associated with colonization of the proximal gut by environmental bacteria

Yang, Liying; Poles, Michael A; Fisch, Gene S; Ma, Yingfei; Nossa, Carlos; Phelan, Joan A; Pei, Zhiheng
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of HIV infection on colonization resistance in the proximal gut. DESIGN: It was a case-control study. METHODS: We contrasted microbiota composition between eight HIV-1-infected patients and eight HIV-negative controls to characterize community alteration and detect exogenous bacteria in the esophagus, stomach, and duodenum, as well as the mouth using a universal 16s ribosomal RNA gene survey and correlated the findings with HIV serostatus and peripheral blood T-cell counts. RESULTS: HIV infection was associated with an enrichment of Proteobacteria (P=0.020) and depletion of Firmicutes (P = 0.005) in the proximal gut. In particular, environmental species Burkholderia fungorum and Bradyrhizobium pachyrhizi colonized the duodenum of HIV patients who had abnormal blood CD4 T-cell counts but were absent in HIV-negative controls or HIV patients whose CD4 cell counts were normal. The two species coexisted and exhibited a decreasing trend proximally toward the stomach and esophagus and were virtually absent in the mouth. B. fungorum always outnumbered B. pachyrhizi in a ratio of approximately 15 to 1 regardless of the body sites (P < 0.0001, r = 0.965). Their abundance was inversely correlated with CD4 cell counts (P = 0.004) but not viral load. Overgrowth of potential opportunistic pathogens for example, Prevotella, Fusobacterium, and Ralstonia and depletion of beneficial bacteria, for example, Lactobacillus was also observed in HIV patients. CONCLUSIONS: The colonization of the duodenum by environmental bacteria reflects loss of colonization resistance in HIV infection. Their correlation with CD4 cell counts suggests that compromised immunity could be responsible for the observed invasion by exogenous microbes.
PMCID:4813506
PMID: 26731752
ISSN: 1473-5571
CID: 1900512

The first microbial environment of infants born by C-section: the operating room microbes

Shin, Hakdong; Pei, Zhiheng; Martinez, Keith A 2nd; Rivera-Vinas, Juana I; Mendez, Keimari; Cavallin, Humberto; Dominguez-Bello, Maria G
BACKGROUND: Newborns delivered by C-section acquire human skin microbes just after birth, but the sources remain unknown. We hypothesized that the operating room (OR) environment contains human skin bacteria that could be seeding C-section born infants. RESULTS: To test this hypothesis, we sampled 11 sites in four operating rooms from three hospitals in two cities. Following a C-section procedure, we swabbed OR floors, walls, ventilation grids, armrests, and lamps. We sequenced the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene of 44 samples using Illumina MiSeq platform. Sequences were analyzed using the QIIME pipeline. Only 68 % of the samples (30/44, >1000 sequences per site) yielded sufficient DNA reads to be analyzed. The bacterial content of OR dust corresponded to human skin bacteria, with dominance of Staphylococcus and Corynebacterium. Diversity of bacteria was the highest in the ventilation grids and walls but was also present on top of the surgery lamps. Beta diversity analyses showed OR dust bacterial content clustering first by city and then by hospital (t test using unweighted UniFrac distances, p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the dust from ORs, collected right after a C-section procedure, contains deposits of human skin bacteria. The OR microbiota is the first environment for C-section newborns, and OR microbes might be seeding the microbiome in these babies. Further studies are required to identify how this OR microbiome exposure contributes to the seeding of the neonatal microbiome. The results might be relevant to infant health, if the current increase in risk of immune and metabolic diseases in industrialized societies is related to lack of natural exposure to the vaginal microbiome during labor and birth.
PMCID:4665759
PMID: 26620712
ISSN: 2049-2618
CID: 1863282

Microbiome, a new dimension in cancer research

Neto, Antonio Galvao; Bradshaw, Azore-Dee; Pei, Zhiheng
PMCID:4598441
PMID: 26539446
ISSN: 2305-5839
CID: 1825632

Fast disease progression in simian HIV-infected female macaque is accompanied by a robust local inflammatory innate immune and microbial response

Ren, Wuze; Ma, Yingfei; Yang, Liying; Gettie, Agegnehu; Salas, January; Russell, Kasi; Blanchard, James; Davidow, Amy; Pei, Zhiheng; Chang, Theresa L; Cheng-Mayer, Cecilia
OBJECTIVE: Gender differences in immune response and the rate of disease progression in HIV-infected individuals have been reported but the underlying mechanism remains unclear, in part because of the lack of relevant animal models. Here, we report a novel nonhuman primate model for investigation of sex disparity in HIV disease progression. DESIGN/METHODS: Viral load and rate of disease progression were evaluated in rhesus macaques infected intrarectally with lineage-related subtype C R5 simian HIVs. Cytokine/chemokine levels in rectal swab eluates, and bacterial species adherent to the swabs and in the feces were determined. RESULTS: Simian HIV-infected female rhesus macaques progressed faster to AIDS than male macaques, recapitulating the sex bias in HIV-1 disease in humans. There were no significant differences in the levels of soluble immune mediators in the rectal mucosa of naive female and male macaques. However, an exploratory longitudinal study in six infected macaques indicates that the female macaques mounted an earlier and more robust proinflammatory skewed rectal immune response to infection. Moreover, expansion of Proteobacteria that increase in other intestinal inflammatory disorders was significantly higher in the rectal mucosa of female than male macaques during acute infection. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that sex differences in local innate immune activation and compositional shifts in the gut microbiota could be the drivers of increased disease susceptibility in female macaques. Further studies with this novel nonhuman primate model of HIV infection could lead to innovative research on gender differences, which may have important therapeutic implications for controlling disease in infected men as well as women.
PMCID:4542014
PMID: 26035329
ISSN: 1473-5571
CID: 1615402

Sex, Body Mass Index, and Dietary Fiber Intake Influence the Human Gut Microbiome

Dominianni, Christine; Sinha, Rashmi; Goedert, James J; Pei, Zhiheng; Yang, Liying; Hayes, Richard B; Ahn, Jiyoung
Increasing evidence suggests that the composition of the human gut microbiome is important in the etiology of human diseases; however, the personal factors that influence the gut microbiome composition are poorly characterized. Animal models point to sex hormone-related differentials in microbiome composition. In this study, we investigated the relationship of sex, body mass index (BMI) and dietary fiber intake with the gut microbiome in 82 humans. We sequenced fecal 16S rRNA genes by 454 FLX technology, then clustered and classified the reads to microbial genomes using the QIIME pipeline. Relationships of sex, BMI, and fiber intake with overall gut microbiome composition and specific taxon abundances were assessed by permutational MANOVA and multivariate logistic regression, respectively. We found that sex was associated with the gut microbiome composition overall (p=0.001). The gut microbiome in women was characterized by a lower abundance of Bacteroidetes (p=0.03). BMI (>25 kg/m2 vs. <25 kg/m2) was associated with the gut microbiome composition overall (p=0.05), and this relationship was strong in women (p=0.03) but not in men (p=0.29). Fiber from beans and from fruits and vegetables were associated, respectively, with greater abundance of Actinobacteria (p=0.006 and false discovery rate adjusted q=0.05) and Clostridia (p=0.009 and false discovery rate adjusted q=0.09). Our findings suggest that sex, BMI, and dietary fiber contribute to shaping the gut microbiome in humans. Better understanding of these relationships may have significant implications for gastrointestinal health and disease prevention.
PMCID:4398427
PMID: 25874569
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 1533022

Personal determinants of the human gut microbiome [Meeting Abstract]

Dominianni, Christine; Sinha, Rashmi; Goedert, James J; Pei, Zhiheng; Yang, Liying; Hayes, Richard B; Ahn, Jiyoung
ISI:000349906904277
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 1598442

Oral microbiome and risk of head and neck cancer, a nested case-control study [Meeting Abstract]

Ahn, Jiyoung; Ma, Yingfei; Purdue, Mark P; Freedman, Neal D; Gapstur, Susan M; Yang, Liying; Hayes, Richard B; Pei, Zhiheng
ISI:000349910202124
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 1599232

De novo large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the prostate, case report and literature review

Acosta-Gonzalez, Gabriel; Qin, Jia; Wieczorek, Rosemary; Melamed, Jonathan; Deng, Fang-Ming; Zhou, Ming; Makarov, Danil; Ye, Fei; Pei, Zhiheng; Pincus, Matthew R; Lee, Peng
Large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the prostate (LCNEC), de novo in particular, is an extremely rare entity that has only been described in the literature in case reports. Historically, the majority of the cases of LCNEC reported in the literature represent typical prostatic adenocarcinomas that transformed after long standing androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). These cases were admixed with histological areas of usual adenocarcinoma and showed hybrid features of both neuroendocrine and usual adenocarcinoma. Here we present a case of an LCNEC without admixed areas of usual prostatic adenocarcinoma arising de novo in a patient without prior history of hormonal therapy. The tumor also shows morphologic evidence of neuroendocrine differentiation; composed of large sheets and nests of cells with moderate amphophilic cytoplasm with peripheral palisading, and vesicular clumpy chromatin with prominent nucleoli. The carcinoma's prostatic origin is indicated by positive immunohistochemical staining for PSA, PAP, PSMA, racemase, and Nkx3.1. Diffusely positive staining for chromogranin and synaptophysin, as well as the presence of secretory granules in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells demonstrated by electron microscopy supports the NE differentiation. NE prostate cancer usually does not express AR and is refractory to ADT therapy while AR and ERG are positive in this case. In summary, we report a de novo LCNEC of the prostate with review of literature, in particular, clinical implications.
PMCID:4297330
PMID: 25606580
ISSN: 2330-1910
CID: 1440202

Beyond infectious disease: welcome to the era of population microbiology [Editorial]

Pincus, Matthew R; Pei, Zhiheng
PMID: 25439278
ISSN: 0272-2712
CID: 1369202

The Interrelationships of the Gut Microbiome and Inflammation in Colorectal Carcinogenesis

Cho, Margaret; Carter, Janell; Harari, Saul; Pei, Zhiheng
The cause of colorectal cancer (CRC) is multifactorial, with genetic, molecular, inflammatory, and environmental risk factors. Recently, the gut microbiota has been recognized as a new environmental contributor to CRC in both animal models and human studies. An additional interplay of the gut microbiome with inflammation is also evident in studies that have shown that inflammation alone or the presence of bacteria/bacterial metabolites alone is not enough to promote tumorigenesis. Rather, complex interrelationships with the gut microbiome, inflammation, genetics, and other environmental factors are evident in progression of colorectal tumors.
PMCID:4254421
PMID: 25439270
ISSN: 0272-2712
CID: 1370012