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Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension

The mycobiome is an essential constituent of the human microbiome and is associated with various diseases. However, the role of oral and gut fungi in hypertension (HTN) remains largely unexplored. In this study, saliva, subgingival plaques, and feces were collected from 36 participants with HTN and...

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Autores principales: Chen, Bo-Yan, Lin, Wen-Zhen, Li, Yu-Lin, Bi, Chao, Du, Lin-Juan, Liu, Yuan, Zhou, Lu-Jun, Liu, Ting, Xu, Shuo, Shi, Chao-Ji, Zhu, Hong, Wang, Yong-Li, Sun, Jian-Yong, Liu, Yan, Zhang, Wu-Chang, Zhang, Zhiyuan, Zhang, Hui-li, Zhu, Ya-Qin, Duan, Sheng-Zhong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36475759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01956-22
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author Chen, Bo-Yan
Lin, Wen-Zhen
Li, Yu-Lin
Bi, Chao
Du, Lin-Juan
Liu, Yuan
Zhou, Lu-Jun
Liu, Ting
Xu, Shuo
Shi, Chao-Ji
Zhu, Hong
Wang, Yong-Li
Sun, Jian-Yong
Liu, Yan
Zhang, Wu-Chang
Zhang, Zhiyuan
Zhang, Hui-li
Zhu, Ya-Qin
Duan, Sheng-Zhong
author_facet Chen, Bo-Yan
Lin, Wen-Zhen
Li, Yu-Lin
Bi, Chao
Du, Lin-Juan
Liu, Yuan
Zhou, Lu-Jun
Liu, Ting
Xu, Shuo
Shi, Chao-Ji
Zhu, Hong
Wang, Yong-Li
Sun, Jian-Yong
Liu, Yan
Zhang, Wu-Chang
Zhang, Zhiyuan
Zhang, Hui-li
Zhu, Ya-Qin
Duan, Sheng-Zhong
author_sort Chen, Bo-Yan
collection PubMed
description The mycobiome is an essential constituent of the human microbiome and is associated with various diseases. However, the role of oral and gut fungi in hypertension (HTN) remains largely unexplored. In this study, saliva, subgingival plaques, and feces were collected from 36 participants with HTN and 24 healthy controls for metagenomic sequencing. The obtained sequences were analyzed using the Kraken2 taxonomic annotation pipeline to assess fungal composition and diversity. Correlations between oral and gut fungi and clinic parameters, between fungi within the same sample types, and between different sample types were identified by Spearman’s correlation analysis. Overall, the subgingival fungal microbiome had substantially higher alpha diversity than the salivary and fecal fungal microbiomes. The fungal microbiomes of the three sample types displayed distinct beta diversity from each other. Oral fungi but not gut fungi in HTN had beta diversity significantly different from that of controls. Among the fungi shared in the oral cavity and gut, Exophiala was the genus with the most notable changes. Exophiala spinifera was the most abundant salivary species in HTN. Some fungal species directly correlated with blood pressure, including gut Exophiala xenobiotica and Exophiala mesophila. The markedly impaired ecological cocorrelation networks of oral and gut fungi in HTN suggested compromised association among fungal species. Most fungi were shared in the oral cavity and gut, and their correlations suggested the potential interplays between oral and gut fungi. In conclusion, the oral cavity and intestine have unique fungal ecological environments. The fungal enrichment and ecology in HTN, the correlations between oral and gut fungi, and the associations between oral and gut fungi and clinical parameters suggest an important role that the fungal microbiome may play in HTN. IMPORTANCE Our study fills the gap in human studies investigating the oral and gut fungal microbiota in association with blood pressure. It characterizes the diversity and composition of the oral and gut fungal microbiome in human subjects, elucidates the dysbiosis of fungal ecology in a hypertensive population, and establishes oral-gut fungal correlations and fungus-clinical parameter correlations. Targeting fungi in the oral cavity and/or gut may provide novel strategies for the prevention and treatment of hypertension.
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spelling pubmed-99274682023-02-15 Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension Chen, Bo-Yan Lin, Wen-Zhen Li, Yu-Lin Bi, Chao Du, Lin-Juan Liu, Yuan Zhou, Lu-Jun Liu, Ting Xu, Shuo Shi, Chao-Ji Zhu, Hong Wang, Yong-Li Sun, Jian-Yong Liu, Yan Zhang, Wu-Chang Zhang, Zhiyuan Zhang, Hui-li Zhu, Ya-Qin Duan, Sheng-Zhong Microbiol Spectr Research Article The mycobiome is an essential constituent of the human microbiome and is associated with various diseases. However, the role of oral and gut fungi in hypertension (HTN) remains largely unexplored. In this study, saliva, subgingival plaques, and feces were collected from 36 participants with HTN and 24 healthy controls for metagenomic sequencing. The obtained sequences were analyzed using the Kraken2 taxonomic annotation pipeline to assess fungal composition and diversity. Correlations between oral and gut fungi and clinic parameters, between fungi within the same sample types, and between different sample types were identified by Spearman’s correlation analysis. Overall, the subgingival fungal microbiome had substantially higher alpha diversity than the salivary and fecal fungal microbiomes. The fungal microbiomes of the three sample types displayed distinct beta diversity from each other. Oral fungi but not gut fungi in HTN had beta diversity significantly different from that of controls. Among the fungi shared in the oral cavity and gut, Exophiala was the genus with the most notable changes. Exophiala spinifera was the most abundant salivary species in HTN. Some fungal species directly correlated with blood pressure, including gut Exophiala xenobiotica and Exophiala mesophila. The markedly impaired ecological cocorrelation networks of oral and gut fungi in HTN suggested compromised association among fungal species. Most fungi were shared in the oral cavity and gut, and their correlations suggested the potential interplays between oral and gut fungi. In conclusion, the oral cavity and intestine have unique fungal ecological environments. The fungal enrichment and ecology in HTN, the correlations between oral and gut fungi, and the associations between oral and gut fungi and clinical parameters suggest an important role that the fungal microbiome may play in HTN. IMPORTANCE Our study fills the gap in human studies investigating the oral and gut fungal microbiota in association with blood pressure. It characterizes the diversity and composition of the oral and gut fungal microbiome in human subjects, elucidates the dysbiosis of fungal ecology in a hypertensive population, and establishes oral-gut fungal correlations and fungus-clinical parameter correlations. Targeting fungi in the oral cavity and/or gut may provide novel strategies for the prevention and treatment of hypertension. American Society for Microbiology 2022-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9927468/ /pubmed/36475759 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01956-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Chen et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Chen, Bo-Yan
Lin, Wen-Zhen
Li, Yu-Lin
Bi, Chao
Du, Lin-Juan
Liu, Yuan
Zhou, Lu-Jun
Liu, Ting
Xu, Shuo
Shi, Chao-Ji
Zhu, Hong
Wang, Yong-Li
Sun, Jian-Yong
Liu, Yan
Zhang, Wu-Chang
Zhang, Zhiyuan
Zhang, Hui-li
Zhu, Ya-Qin
Duan, Sheng-Zhong
Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title_full Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title_fullStr Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title_short Characteristics and Correlations of the Oral and Gut Fungal Microbiome with Hypertension
title_sort characteristics and correlations of the oral and gut fungal microbiome with hypertension
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36475759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01956-22
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