Abstract

Mounting evidence suggests that Lactobacillus species may not necessarily be the sine qua non of healthy cervicovaginal microbiota (CVM), especially among reproductive-age African women. A majority of African women have high-diversity non-Lactobacillus-dominated CVM whose bacterial functions remain poorly characterized. Functional profiling of the CVM is vital for investigating human host-microbiota interactions in health and disease. Here, we investigated the functional potential of L. iners-dominated and high-diversity non-Lactobacillus-dominated CVM of 75 African women with and without bacterial vaginosis (BV) and high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infection. Functional contents were predicted using PICRUSt. Microbial taxonomic diversity, BV, and HR-HPV infection statuses were correlated with the inferred functional composition of the CVM. Differentially abundant inferred functional categories were identified using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) effect size (LEfSe) (p-value <0.05 and logarithmic LDA score >2.0). Of the 75 women, 56 (74.7%), 35 (46.7%), and 29 (38.7%) had high-diversity non-Lactobacillus-dominated CVM, BV, and HR-HPV infection, respectively. Alpha diversity of the inferred functional contents (as measured by Shannon diversity index) was significantly higher in women with high-diversity non-Lactobacillus-dominated CVM and BV than their respective counterparts (H statistic ≥11.5, q-value <0.001). Ordination of the predicted functional metagenome content (using Bray-Curtis distances) showed that the samples segregated according to the extent of microbial taxonomic diversity and BV (pseudo-F statistic ≥19.6, q-value = 0.001) but not HR-HPV status (pseudo-F statistic = 1.7, q-value = 0.159). LEfSe analysis of the inferred functional categories revealed that transport systems (including ABC transporters) and transcription factors were enriched in high-diversity CVM. Interestingly, transcription factors and sporulation functional categories were uniquely associated with high-diversity CVM, BV, and HR-HPV infection. Our predictive functional analysis reveals features unique to high-diversity CVM, BV and HR-HPV infections. Such features may represent important biomarkers of BV and HR-HPV infection. Our findings require proof-of-concept functional studies to examine the relevance of these potential biomarkers in women’s reproductive health and disease.

Highlights

  • A healthy cervicovaginal microbiota (CVM) of reproductive-age women is regarded as one that is colonized predominantly by a single or multiple Lactobacillus species, notably L. crispatus, L. gasseri, L. iners, or L. jensenii [1]

  • The other CVM were dominated by L. crispatus (CST-1: 2.3%), L. jensenii (CST-2: 2.3%), L. iners (CST-3: 21.8%), Aerococcus sp. (CST-4: 1.1%), Streptococcus sp. (CST-5: 4.6%), Chlamydia trachomatis (CST-6: 2.3%), or Corynebacterium sp. (CST-7: 1.1%)

  • In CST3, L. iners and L. crispatus were in greater relative abundance than in community state types (CSTs)-8 (p-value

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Summary

Introduction

A healthy cervicovaginal microbiota (CVM) of reproductive-age women is regarded as one that is colonized predominantly by a single or multiple Lactobacillus species, notably L. crispatus, L. gasseri, L. iners, or L. jensenii [1]. Molecular studies have challenged this longheld concept of a healthy CVM following the observations of non-Lactobacillus-dominated CVM, often with high bacterial diversity, among some healthy women. A series of studies have observed that the patterns of CVM vary markedly among women from different ethnic/racial background, with high-diversity CVM being not uncommon among women of African descent [2,3], including African Surinamese, Ghanaian [3], Nigerian [4], Kenyan [5], Rwandan [6], and South African women [7,8]. Among the common cervicovaginal Lactobacillus spp., L. iners has been pointed out to be the least stable and least protective; can facilitate transition between bacterial vaginosis (BV) and non-BV (other Lactobacillus-dominated) states [1]. Women colonized with L. iners are more likely to be predisposed to BV relative to women colonized with L. crispatus [9]

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