Abstract
Background: Trachoma, a neglected tropical disease, is the leading infectious cause of blindness and visual impairment worldwide. Host responses to ocular chlamydial infection resulting in chronic inflammation and expansion of non-chlamydial bacteria are hypothesized risk factors for development of active trachoma and conjunctival scarring.Methods: Ocular swabs from trachoma endemic populations in The Gambia were selected from archived samples for 16S sequencing and host conjunctival gene expression. We recruited children with active trachoma and adults with conjunctival scarring, alongside corresponding matched controls.Findings: In children, active trachoma was not associated with significant changes in the ocular microbiome. Haemophilus enrichment was associated with antimicrobial responses but not linked to active trachoma. Adults with scarring trachoma had a reduced ocular bacterial diversity compared to controls, with increased relative abundance of Corynebacterium. Increased abundance of Corynebacterium in scarring disease was associated with innate immune responses to the microbiota, dominated by altered mucin expression and increased matrix adhesion.Interpretation: In the absence of current Chlamydia trachomatis infection, changes in the ocular microbiome associate with differential expression of antimicrobial and inflammatory genes that impair epithelial cell health. In scarring trachoma, expansion of non-pathogenic bacteria such as Corynebacterium and innate responses are coincident, warranting further investigation of this relationship. Comparisons between active and scarring trachoma supported the relative absence of type-2 interferon responses in scarring, whilst highlighting a common suppression of re-epithelialization with altered epithelial and bacterial adhesion, likely contributing to development of scarring pathology.
Highlights
Ocular Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) infection causes trachoma, the leading infectious cause of blindness worldwide
No demographic variables were significantly associated with active trachoma (AT) in children or with scarring trachoma (ST) in adults, and unless otherwise stated, downstream analyses were only adjusted for age and gender
We found pro-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and tissue-remodeling gene expression was associated with AT and ST, as previously described (Burton et al, 2011b; Hu et al, 2012; Ramadhani et al, 2017)
Summary
Ocular Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) infection causes trachoma, the leading infectious cause of blindness worldwide. The factors involved in the inflammatory responses to repeated Ct infection that lead to conjunctival scarring, trichiasis, corneal opacity and blindness remain poorly understood. The ocular surface is still generally considered to harbor a paucibacillary community, bacteria have been isolated from higher proportions of healthy conjunctivae by using more intensive modern culture techniques (Perkins et al, 1975). Subsequent studies utilizing approaches to sequence prokaryotic 16S ribosomal RNA genes (16S rRNA) for identification of ocular bacterial communities confirmed the presence of Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas spp., amongst others, and further developed our understanding of the ocular microbiome beyond those species detectable by in vitro culture. Host responses to ocular chlamydial infection resulting in chronic inflammation and expansion of non-chlamydial bacteria are hypothesized risk factors for development of active trachoma and conjunctival scarring
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