4.8 Article

The Placenta Harbors a Unique Microbiome

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 6, Issue 237, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3008599

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH Director's New Innovator Award [DP2 DP21DP2OD001500]
  2. Burroughs Welcome Fund Preterm Birth Initiative
  3. HMP funded through the NIH Director's Common Fund at the NIH
  4. National Human Genome Research Institute at NIH [U54HG004973]
  5. Baylor College of Medicine
  6. Alkek Center of Metagenomics and Microbiome Research at Baylor College of Medicine through
  7. Biogaia AB (Stockholm, Sweden)

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Humans and their microbiomes have coevolved as a physiologic community composed of distinct body site niches with metabolic and antigenic diversity. The placental microbiome has not been robustly interrogated, despite recent demonstrations of intracellular bacteria with diverse metabolic and immune regulatory functions. A population-based cohort of placental specimens collected under sterile conditions from 320 subjects with extensive clinical data was established for comparative 16S ribosomal DNA-based and whole-genome shotgun (WGS) metagenomic studies. Identified taxa and their gene carriage patterns were compared to other human body site niches, including the oral, skin, airway (nasal), vaginal, and gut microbiomes from nonpregnant controls. We characterized a unique placental microbiome niche, composed of nonpathogenic commensal microbiota from the Firmicutes, Tenericutes, Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Fusobacteria phyla. In aggregate, the placental microbiome profiles were most akin (Bray-Curtis dissimilarity < 0.3) to the human oral microbiome. 16S-based operational taxonomic unit analyses revealed associations of the placental microbiome with a remote history of antenatal infection (permutational multivariate analysis of variance, P = 0.006), such as urinary tract infection in the first trimester, as well as with preterm birth < 37 weeks (P = 0.001).

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