Pal Gian, Ramirez Vivian, Engen Phillip A, Naqib Ankur, Forsyth Christopher B, Green Stefan J, Mahdavinia Mahboobeh, Batra Pete S, Tajudeen Bobby A, Keshavarzian Ali
Department of Neurology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
Rush Medical College, Rush Center for Integrated Microbiome and Chronobiology Research, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
NPJ Parkinsons Dis. 2021 Dec 8;7(1):111. doi: 10.1038/s41531-021-00254-y.
Olfactory dysfunction is a pre-motor symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) that appears years prior to diagnosis and can affect quality of life in PD. Changes in microbiota community in deep nasal cavity near the olfactory bulb may trigger the olfactory bulb-mediated neuroinflammatory cascade and eventual dopamine loss in PD. To determine if the deep nasal cavity microbiota of PD is significantly altered in comparison to healthy controls, we characterized the microbiota of the deep nasal cavity using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing in PD subjects and compared it to that of spousal and non-spousal healthy controls. Correlations between microbial taxa and PD symptom severity were also explored. Olfactory microbial communities of PD individuals were more similar to those of their spousal controls than to non-household controls. In direct comparison of PD and spousal controls and of PD and non-spousal controls, significantly differently abundant taxa were identified, and this included increased relative abundance of putative opportunistic-pathobiont species such as Moraxella catarrhalis. M. catarrhalis was also significantly correlated with more severe motor scores in PD subjects. This proof-of-concept study provides evidence that potential pathobionts are detected in the olfactory bulb and that a subset of changes in the PD microbiota community could be a consequence of unique environmental factors associated with PD living. We hypothesize that an altered deep nasal microbiota, characterized by a putative pro-inflammatory microbial community, could trigger neuroinflammation in PD.
嗅觉功能障碍是帕金森病(PD)的一种运动前症状,在诊断前数年就会出现,并且会影响PD患者的生活质量。嗅球附近深鼻腔内微生物群落的变化可能会触发嗅球介导的神经炎症级联反应,并最终导致PD患者多巴胺丧失。为了确定与健康对照相比,PD患者深鼻腔微生物群是否有显著改变,我们使用16S rRNA基因扩增子测序对PD患者深鼻腔微生物群进行了特征分析,并将其与配偶及非配偶健康对照的微生物群进行比较。我们还探究了微生物分类群与PD症状严重程度之间的相关性。PD患者的嗅觉微生物群落与其配偶对照的更为相似,而非与非家庭成员对照的相似。在PD与配偶对照以及PD与非配偶对照的直接比较中,鉴定出了丰度有显著差异的分类群,这包括卡他莫拉菌等假定机会致病菌的相对丰度增加。卡他莫拉菌在PD患者中也与更严重的运动评分显著相关。这项概念验证研究提供了证据,表明在嗅球中检测到了潜在的致病共生菌,并且PD微生物群落的一部分变化可能是与PD患者生活相关的独特环境因素导致的结果。我们推测,以假定的促炎微生物群落为特征的深鼻腔微生物群改变可能会引发PD中的神经炎症。