Xepapadaki Paraskevi, Megremis Spyridon, Rovina Nikoletta, Wardzyńska Aleksandra, Pasioti Maria, Kritikou Maria, Papadopoulos Nikolaos G
Allergy Department, 2nd Paediatric Clinic, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 41, Fidippidou, 11527, Athens, Greece.
Department of Genetics and Genome Biology, Centre for Phage Research, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Pulm Ther. 2024 Jun;10(2):171-182. doi: 10.1007/s41030-024-00261-3. Epub 2024 May 30.
The asthma pandemic imposes a huge burden on patients and health systems in both developed and developing countries. Despite available treatments, symptom control is generally suboptimal, and hospitalizations and deaths remain at unacceptably high levels. A pivotal aspect of asthma that warrants further exploration is the influence of the respiratory microbiome and virome in modulating disease activity. A plethora of studies report that the respiratory microbiome is characteristically dysbiotic in asthma. In addition, our data suggest that dysbiosis is also observed on the respiratory virome, partly characterized by the reduced abundance of bacteriophages (phages). Even though phages can naturally infect and control their bacterial prey, phage therapy has been grossly neglected in the Western world, although more recently it is more widely used as a novel tool against bacterial infections. However, it has never been used for tackling microbiome dysbiosis in human non-communicable diseases. This review provides an up-to-date understanding of the microbiome and virome's role within the airways in relation to asthma morbidity. It also advances the rationale and hypothesis for the CURE project. Specifically, the CURE project suggests that managing the respiratory microbiome through phage therapy is viable and may result in restoring eubiosis within the asthmatic airway. This entails controlling immune dysregulation and the clinical manifestation of the disease. To accomplish this goal, it is crucial to predict the effects of introducing specific phage mixtures into the intricate ecology of the airways and devise suitable interventions.
哮喘流行给发达国家和发展中国家的患者及卫生系统带来了巨大负担。尽管有可用的治疗方法,但症状控制总体上仍不理想,住院率和死亡率仍处于令人无法接受的高水平。哮喘的一个关键方面值得进一步探索,即呼吸道微生物群和病毒群在调节疾病活动中的影响。大量研究报告称,哮喘患者的呼吸道微生物群具有典型的生态失调特征。此外,我们的数据表明,呼吸道病毒群也存在生态失调,部分特征是噬菌体丰度降低。尽管噬菌体可以自然感染并控制其细菌宿主,但在西方世界,噬菌体疗法一直被严重忽视,不过最近它作为一种对抗细菌感染的新工具被更广泛地使用。然而,它从未被用于解决人类非传染性疾病中的微生物群失调问题。本综述提供了对微生物群和病毒群在气道内与哮喘发病机制相关作用的最新认识。它还提出了CURE项目的基本原理和假设。具体而言,CURE项目表明通过噬菌体疗法管理呼吸道微生物群是可行的,可能会使哮喘气道恢复正常生态。这需要控制免疫失调和疾病的临床表现。为实现这一目标,预测将特定噬菌体混合物引入复杂的气道生态系统的效果并设计合适的干预措施至关重要。