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健康人群中人类呼吸道微生物组及抗生素耐药基因的传播

Transmission of the human respiratory microbiome and antibiotic resistance genes in healthy populations.

作者信息

Ren Lili, Yang Jing, Xiao Yan, Guo Li, Rao Jian, Wu Chao, Wang Xinming, Wang Ying, Zhang Linfeng, Zhang Li, Jiang Xiaoqing, Zhong Jiaxin, Zhong Jingchuan, Yang Weizhong, Wang Chen, Wang Jianwei, Li Mingkun

机构信息

National Health Commission Key Laboratory of Systems Biology of Pathogens, State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Health and Multimorbidity and Christophe Mérieux Laboratory, National Institute of Pathogen Biology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.

Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease Pathogenomics, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.

出版信息

Microbiome. 2025 May 6;13(1):115. doi: 10.1186/s40168-025-02107-9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The human microbiome is transmissible between individuals, including pathogens and commensals with metabolic and immune-modulating effects, which could influence susceptibility, severity, and outcomes of both infection and non-infection diseases. However, limited studies of respiratory microbiome transmission within populations have been conducted. Herein, we performed species- and strain-level metagenomic analyses on oropharyngeal (OP) swabs from 1046 healthy urban dwellers across 13 districts, including 111 households with at least two cohabitants, to elucidate the transmission dynamics of the respiratory microbiome within households and communities.

RESULTS

We found that geographic districts accounted for the greatest variation in the OP microbiome, with unrelated individuals from the same district showing greater microbiome similarity and higher strain-sharing rates than those from different districts. Cohabitants, especially spouses and siblings, exhibited similar microbial abundances and shared more strains, with 16.7% (IQR 0.0-33.3%) of strains shared among cohabitants, compared to 0.0% (IQR 0.0-11.1%) in non-cohabiting pairs (p < 0.05). Both respiratory commensals and opportunistic pathogens were shared among cohabitants. In contrast, no evidence of vertical transmission was detected between mother-offspring pairs. Additionally, the OP microbiome contained diverse antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), with 15.0% linked to mobile genetic elements (MGEs) or plasmids; the flanking sequences of these ARGs were more conserved across species than those of non-MGE-associated ARGs, suggesting horizontal transfer of ARGs among respiratory microorganisms.

CONCLUSIONS

In summary, we characterized the transmissible nature of the OP microbiome and the risk of ARG dissemination among respiratory microorganisms. These findings underscore the role of respiratory microbes and ARGs exchange in shaping the microbiome of healthy populations and emphasize their relevance to public health strategies for respiratory health management. Video Abstract.

摘要

背景

人类微生物组可在个体间传播,包括具有代谢和免疫调节作用的病原体和共生菌,这可能影响感染性疾病和非感染性疾病的易感性、严重程度及转归。然而,针对人群中呼吸道微生物组传播的研究有限。在此,我们对来自13个区的1046名健康城市居民的口咽拭子进行了物种和菌株水平的宏基因组分析,其中包括111户至少有两名同居者的家庭,以阐明家庭和社区内呼吸道微生物组的传播动态。

结果

我们发现地理区域对口咽微生物组的差异影响最大,来自同一区域的无关个体比来自不同区域的个体表现出更高的微生物组相似性和菌株共享率。同居者,尤其是配偶和兄弟姐妹,表现出相似的微生物丰度且共享更多菌株,同居者之间共享16.7%(四分位距0.0 - 33.3%)的菌株,而非同居对之间为0.0%(四分位距0.0 - 11.1%)(p < 0.05)。呼吸道共生菌和机会性病原体均可在同居者之间传播。相比之下,未检测到母婴对之间存在垂直传播的证据。此外,口咽微生物组含有多种抗生素抗性基因(ARG),其中15.0%与可移动遗传元件(MGE)或质粒相关;这些ARG的侧翼序列在物种间比非MGE相关ARG的侧翼序列更保守,提示ARG在呼吸道微生物之间发生水平转移。

结论

总之,我们描述了口咽微生物组的可传播特性以及呼吸道微生物中ARG传播的风险。这些发现强调了呼吸道微生物和ARG交换在塑造健康人群微生物组中的作用,并强调了它们与呼吸道健康管理公共卫生策略的相关性。视频摘要。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/0adb/12054256/1d110f49f48e/40168_2025_2107_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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