Department of Biological Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA.
Institute of Human Virology Nigeria, Abuja, Nigeria.
Microbiol Spectr. 2023 Aug 17;11(4):e0087123. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.00871-23. Epub 2023 Jul 10.
Children living with HIV have a higher prevalence of oral diseases, including caries, but the mechanisms underlying this higher prevalence are not well understood. Here, we test the hypothesis that HIV infection is associated with a more cariogenic oral microbiome, characterized by an increase in bacteria involved in the pathogenesis of caries. We present data generated from supragingival plaques collected from 484 children representing three exposure groups: (i) children living with HIV (HI), (ii) children who were perinatally exposed but uninfected (HEU), and (iii) unexposed and therefore uninfected children (HUU). We found that the microbiome of HI children is distinct from those of HEU and HUU children and that this distinction is more pronounced in diseased teeth than healthy teeth, suggesting that the impact of HIV is more severe as caries progresses. Moreover, we report both an increase in bacterial diversity and a decrease in community similarity in our older HI cohort compared to our younger HI cohort, which may in part be a prolonged effect of HIV and/or its treatment. Finally, while Streptococcus mutans is often a dominant species in late-stage caries, it tended to be found at lower frequency in our HI cohort than in other groups. Our results highlight the taxonomic diversity of the supragingival plaque microbiome and suggest that broad and increasingly individualistic ecological shifts are responsible for the pathogenesis of caries in children living with HIV, coupled with a diverse and possibly severe impact on known cariogenic taxa that potentially exacerbates caries. Since its recognition as a global epidemic in the early 1980s, approximately 84.2 million people have been diagnosed with HIV and 40.1 million people have died from AIDS-related illnesses. The development and increased global availability of antiretroviral treatment (ART) regimens have dramatically reduced the mortality rate of HIV and AIDS, yet approximately 1.5 million new infections were reported in 2021, 51% of which are in sub-Saharan Africa. People living with HIV have a higher prevalence of caries and other chronic oral diseases, the mechanisms of which are not well understood. Here, we used a novel genetic approach to characterize the supragingival plaque microbiome of children living with HIV and compared it to the microbiomes of uninfected and perinatally exposed children to better understand the role of oral bacteria in the etiology of tooth decay in the context of HIV exposure and infection.
儿童感染 HIV 后,其口腔疾病(包括龋齿)的发病率更高,但导致这一更高发病率的机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们验证了一个假设,即 HIV 感染与更具致龋性的口腔微生物组有关,其特征是与龋齿发病机制相关的细菌数量增加。我们提供了从 484 名儿童的龈上菌斑中获得的数据,这些儿童代表了三个暴露组:(i)感染 HIV 的儿童(HI),(ii)围产期感染但未感染的儿童(HEU),和(iii)未暴露且未感染的儿童(HUU)。我们发现,HI 儿童的微生物组与 HEU 和 HUU 儿童的微生物组不同,并且这种差异在患病牙齿中比在健康牙齿中更为明显,这表明随着龋齿的发展,HIV 的影响更为严重。此外,与年轻 HI 队列相比,我们发现年龄较大的 HI 队列中细菌多样性增加和群落相似性降低,这可能部分是由于 HIV 及其治疗的长期影响。最后,虽然变形链球菌通常是晚期龋齿的主要物种,但在我们的 HI 队列中发现的频率低于其他组。我们的结果强调了龈上菌斑微生物组的分类多样性,并表明广泛且日益个体化的生态变化是导致 HIV 感染儿童龋齿发病的原因,同时对已知的致龋分类群产生了多样化且可能严重的影响,从而可能加剧龋齿。自 1980 年代初被确认为全球流行病以来,约有 8420 万人被诊断患有 HIV,4010 万人死于艾滋病相关疾病。抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)方案的开发和全球可用性的增加大大降低了 HIV 和艾滋病的死亡率,但 2021 年报告了约 150 万例新感染病例,其中 51%发生在撒哈拉以南非洲地区。HIV 感染者的龋齿和其他慢性口腔疾病的发病率更高,但发病机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用一种新的遗传方法来描述 HIV 感染儿童的龈上菌斑微生物组,并将其与未感染和围产期暴露的儿童的微生物组进行比较,以更好地了解口腔细菌在 HIV 暴露和感染背景下龋齿发病机制中的作用。