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Children’s Hospital Pediatric Grand Rounds May 16, 2014 “The Role of the Microbiome: Current Concepts“ Robert J. Genco, DDS, PhD SUNY Distinguished Professor of Oral Biology, Microbiology and Immunology [email protected] “The Human Microbiome” I. Composition II. Factors Affecting Composition III. The Microbiome in Health and Disease IV. Treatment and Manipulation of the Microbiome In 2000, Nobel Laureate: Joshua Lederberg called for an end to the “We good, they evil” thinking “we should think of each host and its parasites as a superorganism with the respective genomes yoked into a chimera of sorts”. References: Johnson C and Versalovic J. The Human Microbiome and Its Potential Importance to Pediatrics. Pediatrics 129(5):950-960, 2012. The Human Microbiome Project Consortium. Structures, Function, and Diversity of the Healthy Human Microbiome. Nature 486:207-214, 2012. Petrof EO, et al., Microbial Ecosystems Therapeutics: A New Paradigm in Medicine? Beneficial Microbes 4(1):53-65, 2013. Urbaniak C, et al., Microbiota of Human Breast Tissue. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 80(10):3007, 2014. The Human Microbiome Project • NIH project, launched in 2007 • Goals – identify and characterize microorganisms associated with healthy and diseased humans • Methods – culture-independent, sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes • Whole genome sequencing of entire microbial community (microbiome) • Informatics for data analysis 1 Taxonomy Annotation 16S rRNA Gene Annotated database is a collection of sequences whose taxonomy assignments are already known. Bacterial Clusters Findings • Enrolled 300 healthy humans • Specimens collected from oral cavity (6 sites) nares skin GI tract vagina • 16SrRNA sequenced-describes diversity of organisms 52 phyla discovered mostly uncultured • Oral flora 1000 bacteria species found • 100 trillion microbiological cells They out number us 10:1 • 10 trillion mammalian cells (Koren et al., PLOS Computational Biology 9:1, 2013) Predominant Bacterial Phyla in the Human Body Phylum Characteristics Examples Firmicutes Gram-positive; diverse morphology, mainly beneficial and commensal Lactobacillus, Ruminococcus, Clostridium, Staphylococcus, Enterococcus Bacteroidetes Gram-negative; in soil, seawater, animal intestines Bacteroides, Prevotella Proteobacteria Gram-negative; variety of pathogens Escherichia, Pseudomonas Actinobacteria Gram-positive; major antibiotic producers Bifidobacterium, Streptomyces, Nocardia 2 Women’s Health Initiative-Subgingival Microbiome Healthy Periodontal Disease (Caporaso et al., Genome Biology 12:R50, 2011) Predominant Organisms in Periodontitis – Previously Undetected Species Highlighted Bacteroides oral taxon 274, 271 Camplyobacter species Capnocytophaga species Cantonella morbi Chlorotrexi Clostridiales Comamonadacea Desulfovibrio SRI Dialister species Eubacterium species Filifactor alocis Fusobacterium species Gemella morbillorum Johnsonella species Lachnospiraceae species Leptotrichia species Mogibacterium timidum Neisseria species Peptococcus Peptoniphilus Porphyromonas species Prevotella species Selenomonas species Streptococcus species Synergistes species TM7 species Tannerella species Treponema species Veillonella species Study of the oral microbiome from the Mesolithic period (10,000-8,000 b.c.; before farming) to the medieval period. (Adler CJ, et al., Nature Genetics 45:450-455, 2013) • Calculus from 34 prehistoric skulls was harvested. • Sequencing of extracted bacterial DNA. • Controlled for environmental, contaminating DNA. Prehistoric Plaque and the Gentrification of Europe’s Mouth Results • Oral microbiota shift with introduction of farming in Neolithic period (4500-2000 BC). • Early hunter-gatherer had fewer caries and periodontal disease associated bacteria. • Agricultural period led to introduction of cariogenic and periodontal bacteria. • Phylum-level classification of microbiome carried out. 3 Hunter-gather (Mesolithic) Modern Samples (500-1300 AD) • Clostridiales • Ruminococcaceae Farming-Population (Neolithic) Veillonellacea (decay-cavity) Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella and Treponena genera Higher level of Streptococcus mutans-decay causing (Industrial Revolution, associated with refined sugar from beets and sugar cane). Periodontal Disease Conclusion Major changes in carbohydrate intake in human history – appears to have affected the oral microbiome leading to shift to cariogenic and periodontopathic flora. Pathophysiologic Significance of the Human Microbiome • • • • • • • • • • Keep pathogens in check Regulates immune system Digest food Synthesize vitamins Linked to mood and behavior Associated with gut disorders Eczema Chronic sinusitis Dental caries, and periodontal disease In dysbiotic state may harbor one or more of 1200 pathogens “The Human Microbiome” Microbiome Acquisition and Composition I. Composition II. Factors Affecting Composition III. The Microbiome in Health and Disease IV. Treatment and Manipulation of the Microbiome Mode of Birth Delivery Nature of Feeding Hospitalization and Gestational Age Effects of Antibiotics 4 Mode of Birth Delivery Vaginally delivered – newborn acquires maternal vaginal and intestinal microbiota. Cesarean delivered – newborn acquires maternal skin microbiota eg., Staphylococcus species. Nature of Feeding Breast Milk Human milk oligosaccharides (HMO) stimulate growth of Bifidobacterium sp. Also HMOs act as decoys → inhibit pathogen binding to epithelial cells. Breast-fed infants Higher levels of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus Formula-fed infants Higher levels of C. difficile - Source of gut microbiome Breast feeding may provide protection from Breast-fed, vaginally delivered term infants Reduced C. difficile and E. coli, and enhanced colonization by beneficial eg. Bifidobacterium spp. allergies, diarrhea, necrotizing entercolitis, obesity, and T2 Diabetes What is the role of beneficial microbes in this protection? 5 Effects of Diet of Microbiome Possible Significance? Major shifts in taxa observed in weaning to solid foods (Koenig JE, et al., PNAS 108(S1):4578-4585, 2011). Bacteroides – produce beneficial molecules like polysaccharide A and short-chain FA Alterations in fiber and fat content of diet of children and adults → changes in microbiome in 24 hrs (Wu GD, et al., Science 334:105, 2011). Bacteroides – associated with animal protein and fat Prevotella – associated with carbohydrates. Polysaccharite A – protective in mouse colitis Short-Chain Fatty Acids – maintenance of colonic epithelium, energy, reg. immunity Developing Infant Gut Microbiome - Full-term, vaginally delivered healthy male. - Monitored gut microbial composition of one infant over 2.5 years. ↓ ↓ Results - Majority of sequences bacterial; fungi, and viruses at low levels. - Diversity increased over time. - At 2.5 yr. old, microbiome resembles the adult. Koenig JE, et al., PNAS 108:1107-1109, 2011 Hospitalization and Gestational Age Intestinal microbiota of preterm infants – reduced bacterial diversity (Rougie et al., Anaerobe, 2010), Jacquiot et al., J. Pediatric, 2011). Antibiotics can lead to reduction in microbial diversity in days, and with some antibiotic recovery is rarely achieved! eg. fluoroquinolone ciprofloxacin Impact is significant in infants Additional risks - selection of antibiotic resistant strains eg. C. difficile diarrhea/colitis 6 “The Human Microbiome” I. Composition II. Factors Affecting Composition III. The Microbiome in Health and Disease IV. Treatment and Manipulation of the Microbiome Putative differences in the microbiome of seroconverted versus high-risk non-diabetic persons Role in Type I Diabetes - Alterations in intestinal microbiome preceed Type I Diabetes Property Seroconverted subjects High-risk control subjects Dominant phylum Bacteroidetes Firmicutes SCFA producers Succinate, acetate Butyrate Bacterial diversity Low High Functional diversity Low High Genus differences Bacteroides Bifidobacterium Clostridium Faecalibacterium Community stability Veillonella Lactobacillus Low High (Dunne J et al., 10.1111/cei.12321 in press, 2014) Intestinal Environment and Type I Diabetes Gut Microbiota and Metabolic Disorders Human Studies Obese – more Firmicutes (Lactobacillus) lower Bacteroidetes than lean Firmicutes → convert indigestible carbohydrates to short chain fatty acids → obesity? Vaarala O, et al., Diabetes 57:2555-2562, 2008 7 Weight loss in Adolescents Weight loss associated with increase in High fat diet leads to inflammation and metabolic disorders. Bacteroides (Prevotella) propionate decreased lipids lean phenotype (Nadal et al., Int. J. Obesity, 2009) “The Human Microbiome” I. Composition II. Factors Affecting Composition III. The Microbiome in Health and Disease IV. Treatment and Manipulation of the Microbiome Prebiotics – oligosaccharides stimulate one or multiple beneficial gut microbes Probiotics – food supplements that contain living bacteria eg. Bifidobacteria, Lactobacilli, Streptococci, non-pathogen E. coli Mostly weak and transient effects. Cani and Delzenne. Current Pharmaceutical Design 15:1546-1558, 2009. Can we significantly change the flora? Prebiotics Probiotics Microbial Transplantation Microbial Transplantation Fecal transplants – in treating C. difficile pseudomembranous colitis. (Eiseman et al., Surgery 1958; Borody and Khoruts, Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol, 2011) 31 studies, 376 patients 90% (65-100%) cure rate Major Challenges - Donor selection - Long-term safety 8 Making it better Synthetic therapeutic probiotic mixture MET – Microbial Ecosystem Therapeutics - 33 cultured species from healthy donor - favorable antibiotic resistance - reliable in continuous culture - administer via colonoscopy - 2 cases of CDI “cured” (Petrof et al., Beneficial Microbes, 2013) Other diseases where MET may be useful • Ulcerative colitis in children and adolescents (Qin et al., 2010, Borody and Campbell, 2012). • Obesity (Greenbaum et al., 2012, Vrieze et al., 2012) lean to obese fecal transfer resulted in insulin sensitivity. • Necrotizing enterocolitis in infants, mixtures of probiotics show protection (Hoyus 1999; Lin et al., 2005, 2008; BinNun et al., 2005). Microbial ecosystems play a crucial role in human health. What do we need to know before we can manipulate the flora to design healthy microbiomes? Healthy What is healthy microbiota? How does it vary over time? How does ecosystem replacement occur? What are the long-term effects? Alcoholic Network-based modeling to identify a core healthy microbiome. Breaking News! Microbiota of Human Breast Tissue Urbaniak C, et al., Applied and Environmental Microbiology 80:3007, March 7, 2014. 9 Summary Breast tissue not sterile; diverse microbiome Proteobacteria most prominent in Canadian and Irish samples. Also principal phylum in human milk. Organisms cultured from breast tissue. Likely DNA is from viable bacteria. Collaborators Further study needed to determine: a) How breast microbiome is established. Jean Wactawski-Wende - Women’s Health Jo Freudenheim – Breast Cancer Mike LaMonte – Metabolic Syndrome b) Why infections do not accompany breast colonization. Amy Millen – Diet c) The extent to which the breast microbiome contributes to the breast-fed infant flora. Michael Buck – Molecular Genetics d) The role of the endogenous breast microbiome. Karen Falkner – Clinical Trials Yijun Sun – Bioinformatics Ashu Sharma – Molecular Genetics Jeff Lackner – Irritable Bowel Syndrome Tim Murphy – Respiratory Infection Frank Scannapieco – Respiratory Infection 10 Who are we? …. a chimera of sorts Thank you! 11