4.7 Article

Association between Human Genetic Variants and the Vaginal Bacteriome of Pregnant Women

Journal

MSYSTEMS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00158-21

Keywords

pregnant women; vaginal bacterial traits; genetic variants; bacteriome; microbiome; 16S amplicon

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81373065, 81773490]

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The study revealed that genetic variants in human genes may influence the vaginal bacteriome composition in pregnant women, with rs303212 in the IFIT1 gene showing a significant association with various vaginal bacteria. Human genetics during pregnancy may be involved in multiple pathways shaping the vaginal bacteriome.
The influence of human genetic variants on the vaginal bacterial traits (VBTs) of pregnant women is still unknown. Using a genome-wide association approach based on the 16S rRNA bacteriome analysis, a total of 72 host genetic variant (single nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs], indels, or copy number variations [CNVs])-VBT associations were found that reached the genome-wide significance level (P< 5 x 10(-8)) with an acceptable genomic inflation factor lambda of <1.1. The majority of these SNPs that reached the genome-wide significance level had a relatively low minor allele frequency (MAF), and only seven of them had MAFs greater than 0.05. rs303212, located at the IFIT1 gene on chromosome 10, was the most eye-catching variant, which had a genome-wide association with the relative abundance (RAB) of Actinobacteria and Sindobacteriaceae and also had a suggestive association with the RAB of a few common vaginal bacteria including Ac tinobacteriota, Firmicutes, Lactobacillus, and Gardnerella vaginalis and the beta diversity weighted UniFrac (P< 1 x 10(-5)). The findings of the study suggest that the vaginal bacteriome may be influenced by a number of genetic variants across the human genome and that interferon signaling may have an important influence on vaginal bacterial communities during pregnancy. IMPORTANCE Knowledge about the influence of host genetics on the vaginal bacteriome in pregnancy is still limited. Although a number of environmental and behavioral factors may exert influences on the structure of vaginal bacterial communities, the vaginal bacteriome often undergoes a relatively fixed transition to a more stable and less diverse state as the menstrual cycle stops, which raises questions on the effects of human genetics. We utilized a genome-wide approach to identify the associations between genetic variants and multiple VBTs and performed enrichment analyses. The human genetics during pregnancy may be involved in multiple pathways. The results may disclose innate functional factors involved in shaping the vaginal bacteriome during pregnancy and provide insight into the establishment of specific strategies for prevention and clinical treatment of pregnancy complications.

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