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Resistome analyses of sputum from COPD and healthy subjects reveals bacterial load-related prevalence of target genes

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posted on 2020-05-22, 10:57 authored by Mohammadali Yavari Ramsheh, Koirobi Haldar, Mona Bafadhel, Leena George, Robert C Free, Catherine John, Nicola F Reeve, Loems Ziegler-Heitbrock, Ivo Gut, Dave Singh, Vijay Mistry, Martin D Tobin, Marco R Oggioni, Chris Brightling, Michael R Barer
Background Antibiotic resistance is a major global threat. We hypothesised that the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) airway is a reservoir of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) that associate with microbiome-specific COPD subgroups. Objective To determine the resistance gene profiles in respiratory samples from COPD patients and healthy volunteers. Methods Quantitative PCR targeting 279 specific ARGs was used to profile the resistomes in sputum from subjects with COPD at stable, exacerbation and recovery visits (n=55; COPD-BEAT study), healthy controls with (n=7) or without (n=22) exposure to antibiotics in the preceding 12 months (EXCEED study) and in bronchial brush samples from COPD (n=8) and healthy controls (n=7) (EvA study). Results ARG mean (SEM) prevalence was greater in stable COPD samples (35.2 (1.6)) than in healthy controls (27.6 (1.7); p=0.004) and correlated with total bacterial abundance (r 2 =0.23; p<0.001). Prevalence of ARG positive signals in individuals was not related to COPD symptoms, lung function or their changes at exacerbation. In the COPD subgroups designated High Î 3Proteobacteria and High Firmicutes, ARG prevalence was not different at stable state but significantly declined from stable through exacerbation to recovery in the former (p=0.011) without changes in total bacterial abundance. The ARG patterns were similar in COPD versus health, COPD microbiome-subgroups and between sputum and bronchoscopic samples independent of antibiotic exposure in the last 12 months. Conclusions ARGs are highly prevalent in sputum, broadly in proportion to bacterial abundance in both healthy and COPD subjects. Thus, COPD appears to be an ARG reservoir due to high levels of bacterial colonisation.

Funding

This work was funded in part by Airway Disease Predicting Outcomes through Patient Specific Computational Modelling (AirPROM) project (funded through FP7 EU grant), Emphysema versus Airways Disease (EvA FP7; 200506), Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship (MT), Medical Research Council (COPD-BEAT), National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester Respiratory Biomedical Centre. This paper presents independent research funded by the NIHR. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.

History

Citation

Ramsheh MY, Haldar K, Bafadhel M, et alResistome analyses of sputum from COPD and healthy subjects reveals bacterial load-related prevalence of target genesThorax 2020;75:8-16.

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

THORAX

Volume

75

Issue

1

Pagination

8 - 16 (9)

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP

issn

0040-6376

eissn

1468-3296

Acceptance date

2019-09-09

Copyright date

2019

Language

English