4.7 Article

Distinct associations of sputum and oral microbiota with atopic, immunologic, and clinical features in mild asthma

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 146, Issue 5, Pages 1016-1026

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.03.028

Keywords

Microbiome; cytokines; sputum; oral; asthma; allergic; corticosteroids; type 2 inflammation

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute AsthmaNet [U10HL098107]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01AI129958, R03HL13831]

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Background: Whether microbiome characteristics of induced sputum or oral samples demonstrate unique relationships to features of atopy or mild asthma in adults is unknown. Objective: We sought to determine sputum and oral microbiota relationships to clinical or immunologic features in mild atopic asthma and the impact on the microbiota of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment administered to ICS-naive subjects with asthma. Methods: Bacterial microbiota profiles were analyzed in induced sputum and oral wash samples from 32 subjects with mild atopic asthma before and after inhaled fluticasone treatment, 18 atopic subjects without asthma, and 16 nonatopic healthy subjects in a multicenter study (NCT01537133). Associations with clinical and immunologic features were examined, including markers of atopy, type 2 inflammation, immune cell populations, and cytokines. Results: Sputum bacterial burden inversely associated with bronchial expression of type 2 (T2)-related genes. Differences in specific sputum microbiota also associated with T2-low asthma phenotype, a subgroup of whom displayed elevations in lung inflammatory mediators and reduced sputum bacterial diversity. Differences in specific oral microbiota were more reflective of atopic status. After ICS treatment of patients with asthma, the compositional structure of sputum microbiota showed greater deviation from baseline in ICS nonresponders than in ICS responders. Conclusions: Novel associations of sputum and oral microbiota to immunologic features were observed in this cohort of subjects with or without ICS-naive mild asthma. These findings confirm and extend our previous report of reduced bronchial bacterial burden and compositional complexity in subjects with T2-high asthma, with additional identification of a T2-low subgroup with a distinct microbiota-immunologic relationship.

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