Abstract

The impact of tuberculosis and of anti-tuberculosis therapy on composition and modification of human lung microbiota has been the object of several investigations. However, no clear outcome has been presented so far and the relationship between M. tuberculosis pulmonary infection and the resident lung microbiota remains vague. In this work we describe the results obtained from a multicenter study of the microbiota of sputum samples from patients with tuberculosis or unrelated lung diseases and healthy donors recruited in Switzerland, Italy and Bangladesh, with the ultimate goal of discovering a microbiota-based biomarker associated with tuberculosis. Bacterial 16S rDNA amplification, high-throughput sequencing and extensive bioinformatic analyses revealed patient-specific flora and high variability in taxon abundance. No common signature could be identified among the individuals enrolled except for minor differences which were not consistent among the different geographical settings. Moreover, anti-tuberculosis therapy did not cause any important variation in microbiota diversity, thus precluding its exploitation as a biomarker for the follow up of tuberculosis patients undergoing treatment.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is a widespread infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis which is transmitted through aerosol droplets containing bacilli released from infected individuals

  • We investigated the composition of sputum microbiota in TB disease and during anti-TB treatment

  • We recruited patients affected by pulmonary TB in different countries, thereby assessing the sputum microbiota of different ethnic cohorts, and performed bacterial 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) amplification from their sputum samples, followed by high-throughput sequencing

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is a widespread infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis which is transmitted through aerosol droplets containing bacilli released from infected individuals. In 2018, the World Health Organization estimated 10 million new TB cases worldwide that led to 1.6 million fatalities, ranking TB as the main cause of death from a single pathogen [1].

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