Rodrigues Hoffmann Aline, Patterson Adam P, Diesel Alison, Lawhon Sara D, Ly Hoai Jaclyn, Elkins Stephenson Christine, Mansell Joanne, Steiner Jörg M, Dowd Scot E, Olivry Thierry, Suchodolski Jan S
Dermatopathology Specialty Service, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, United States of America.
Clinical Dermatology Service, College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 8;9(1):e83197. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083197. eCollection 2014.
Changes in the microbial populations on the skin of animals have traditionally been evaluated using conventional microbiology techniques. The sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes has revealed that the human skin is inhabited by a highly diverse and variable microbiome that had previously not been demonstrated by culture-based methods. The goals of this study were to describe the microbiome inhabiting different areas of the canine skin, and to compare the skin microbiome of healthy and allergic dogs.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: DNA extracted from superficial skin swabs from healthy (n = 12) and allergic dogs (n = 6) from different regions of haired skin and mucosal surfaces were used for 454-pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. Principal coordinates analysis revealed clustering for the different skin sites across all dogs, with some mucosal sites and the perianal regions clustering separately from the haired skin sites. The rarefaction analysis revealed high individual variability between samples collected from healthy dogs and between the different skin sites. Higher species richness and microbial diversity were observed in the samples from haired skin when compared to mucosal surfaces or mucocutaneous junctions. In all examined regions, the most abundant phylum and family identified in the different regions of skin and mucosal surfaces were Proteobacteria and Oxalobacteriaceae. The skin of allergic dogs had lower species richness when compared to the healthy dogs. The allergic dogs had lower proportions of the Betaproteobacteria Ralstonia spp. when compared to the healthy dogs.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The study demonstrates that the skin of dogs is inhabited by much more rich and diverse microbial communities than previously thought using culture-based methods. Our sequence data reveal high individual variability between samples collected from different patients. Differences in species richness was also seen between healthy and allergic dogs, with allergic dogs having lower species richness when compared to healthy dogs.
传统上,动物皮肤上微生物种群的变化是使用传统微生物学技术进行评估的。细菌16S rRNA基因测序表明,人类皮肤栖息着高度多样且多变的微生物群落,这是基于培养的方法此前未曾证实的。本研究的目的是描述栖息在犬类皮肤不同区域的微生物群落,并比较健康犬和过敏犬的皮肤微生物群落。
方法/主要发现:从健康犬(n = 12)和过敏犬(n = 6)的不同有毛皮肤区域和黏膜表面的浅表皮肤拭子中提取的DNA,用于16S rRNA基因的454焦磷酸测序。主坐标分析显示,所有犬只的不同皮肤部位存在聚类,一些黏膜部位和肛周区域与有毛皮肤部位分开聚类。稀疏分析显示,从健康犬采集的样本之间以及不同皮肤部位之间存在很高的个体变异性。与黏膜表面或黏膜皮肤交界处相比,有毛皮肤样本中观察到更高的物种丰富度和微生物多样性。在所有检查区域中,皮肤和黏膜表面不同区域鉴定出的最丰富的门和科是变形菌门和草酸杆菌科。与健康犬相比,过敏犬的皮肤物种丰富度较低。与健康犬相比,过敏犬中β-变形菌罗尔斯通氏菌属的比例较低。
结论/意义:该研究表明,犬类皮肤栖息着比使用基于培养的方法之前认为的更加丰富多样的微生物群落。我们的序列数据显示,从不同患者采集的样本之间存在很高的个体变异性。健康犬和过敏犬之间也观察到物种丰富度的差异,与健康犬相比,过敏犬的物种丰富度较低。