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Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants

After the eradication of polio infection, the plan is to phase-out the live-attenuated oral polio vaccine (OPV). Considering the protective non-specific effects (NSE) of OPV on unrelated pathogens, the withdrawal may impact child health negatively. Within a cluster-randomized trial, we carried out 1...

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Autores principales: Medeiros, Márcia Melo, Ingham, Anna Cäcilia, Nanque, Line Møller, Correia, Claudino, Stegger, Marc, Andersen, Paal Skyt, Fisker, Ane Baerent, Benn, Christine Stabell, Lanaspa, Miguel, Silveira, Henrique, Abrantes, Patrícia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9649904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36386704
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1016220
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author Medeiros, Márcia Melo
Ingham, Anna Cäcilia
Nanque, Line Møller
Correia, Claudino
Stegger, Marc
Andersen, Paal Skyt
Fisker, Ane Baerent
Benn, Christine Stabell
Lanaspa, Miguel
Silveira, Henrique
Abrantes, Patrícia
author_facet Medeiros, Márcia Melo
Ingham, Anna Cäcilia
Nanque, Line Møller
Correia, Claudino
Stegger, Marc
Andersen, Paal Skyt
Fisker, Ane Baerent
Benn, Christine Stabell
Lanaspa, Miguel
Silveira, Henrique
Abrantes, Patrícia
author_sort Medeiros, Márcia Melo
collection PubMed
description After the eradication of polio infection, the plan is to phase-out the live-attenuated oral polio vaccine (OPV). Considering the protective non-specific effects (NSE) of OPV on unrelated pathogens, the withdrawal may impact child health negatively. Within a cluster-randomized trial, we carried out 16S rRNA deep sequencing analysis of fecal and nasopharyngeal microbial content of Bissau–Guinean infants aged 4–8 months, before and after 2 months of OPV revaccination (revaccinated infants = 47) vs. no OPV revaccination (control infants = 47). The aim was to address changes in the gut and upper respiratory bacterial microbiotas due to revaccination. Alpha-diversity for both microbiotas increased similarly over time in OPV-revaccinated infants and controls, whereas greater changes over time in the bacterial composition of gut (p(adjusted) < 0.001) and upper respiratory microbiotas (p(adjusted) = 0.018) were observed in the former. Taxonomic analysis of gut bacterial microbiota revealed a decrease over time in the median proportion of Bifidobacterium longum for all infants (25–14.3%, p = 0.0006 in OPV-revaccinated infants and 25.3–11.6%, p = 0.01 in controls), compatible with the reported weaning. Also, it showed a restricted increase in the median proportion of Prevotella_9 genus in controls (1.4–7.1%, p = 0.02), whereas in OPV revaccinated infants an increase over time in Prevotellaceae family (7.2–17.4%, p = 0.005) together with a reduction in median proportion of potentially pathogenic/opportunistic genera such as Escherichia/Shigella (5.8–3.4%, p = 0.01) were observed. Taxonomic analysis of upper respiratory bacterial microbiota revealed an increase over time in median proportions of potentially pathogenic/opportunistic genera in controls, such as Streptococcus (2.9–11.8%, p = 0.001 and Hemophilus (11.3–20.5%, p = 0.03), not observed in OPV revaccinated infants. In conclusion, OPV revaccination was associated with a healthier microbiome composition 2 months after revaccination, based on a more abundant and diversified bacterial community of Prevotellaceae and fewer pathogenic/opportunistic organisms. Further information on species-level differentiation and functional analysis of microbiome content are warranted to elucidate the impact of OPV-associated changes in bacterial microbiota on child health.
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spelling pubmed-96499042022-11-15 Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants Medeiros, Márcia Melo Ingham, Anna Cäcilia Nanque, Line Møller Correia, Claudino Stegger, Marc Andersen, Paal Skyt Fisker, Ane Baerent Benn, Christine Stabell Lanaspa, Miguel Silveira, Henrique Abrantes, Patrícia Front Microbiol Microbiology After the eradication of polio infection, the plan is to phase-out the live-attenuated oral polio vaccine (OPV). Considering the protective non-specific effects (NSE) of OPV on unrelated pathogens, the withdrawal may impact child health negatively. Within a cluster-randomized trial, we carried out 16S rRNA deep sequencing analysis of fecal and nasopharyngeal microbial content of Bissau–Guinean infants aged 4–8 months, before and after 2 months of OPV revaccination (revaccinated infants = 47) vs. no OPV revaccination (control infants = 47). The aim was to address changes in the gut and upper respiratory bacterial microbiotas due to revaccination. Alpha-diversity for both microbiotas increased similarly over time in OPV-revaccinated infants and controls, whereas greater changes over time in the bacterial composition of gut (p(adjusted) < 0.001) and upper respiratory microbiotas (p(adjusted) = 0.018) were observed in the former. Taxonomic analysis of gut bacterial microbiota revealed a decrease over time in the median proportion of Bifidobacterium longum for all infants (25–14.3%, p = 0.0006 in OPV-revaccinated infants and 25.3–11.6%, p = 0.01 in controls), compatible with the reported weaning. Also, it showed a restricted increase in the median proportion of Prevotella_9 genus in controls (1.4–7.1%, p = 0.02), whereas in OPV revaccinated infants an increase over time in Prevotellaceae family (7.2–17.4%, p = 0.005) together with a reduction in median proportion of potentially pathogenic/opportunistic genera such as Escherichia/Shigella (5.8–3.4%, p = 0.01) were observed. Taxonomic analysis of upper respiratory bacterial microbiota revealed an increase over time in median proportions of potentially pathogenic/opportunistic genera in controls, such as Streptococcus (2.9–11.8%, p = 0.001 and Hemophilus (11.3–20.5%, p = 0.03), not observed in OPV revaccinated infants. In conclusion, OPV revaccination was associated with a healthier microbiome composition 2 months after revaccination, based on a more abundant and diversified bacterial community of Prevotellaceae and fewer pathogenic/opportunistic organisms. Further information on species-level differentiation and functional analysis of microbiome content are warranted to elucidate the impact of OPV-associated changes in bacterial microbiota on child health. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9649904/ /pubmed/36386704 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1016220 Text en Copyright © 2022 Medeiros, Ingham, Nanque, Correia, Stegger, Andersen, Fisker, Benn, Lanaspa, Silveira and Abrantes. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Medeiros, Márcia Melo
Ingham, Anna Cäcilia
Nanque, Line Møller
Correia, Claudino
Stegger, Marc
Andersen, Paal Skyt
Fisker, Ane Baerent
Benn, Christine Stabell
Lanaspa, Miguel
Silveira, Henrique
Abrantes, Patrícia
Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title_full Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title_fullStr Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title_full_unstemmed Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title_short Oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
title_sort oral polio revaccination is associated with changes in gut and upper respiratory microbiomes of infants
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9649904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36386704
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1016220
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