Fungal cutaneous microbiome and host determinants in preterm and term neonates.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-2020
Identifier
DOI: 10.1038/s41390-019-0719-7
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The neonatal cutaneous mycobiome has not been characterized in preterm infants. Invasive fungal infections in preterm neonates are associated with high mortality. The immaturity of the preterm skin predisposes neonates to invasive infection by skin colonizers. We report the clinical and host determinants that influence the skin mycobiome.
METHODS: Skin swabs from the antecubital fossa, forehead, and gluteal region of 15 preterm and 15 term neonates were obtained during the first 5 weeks of life. The mycobiome was sequenced using the conserved pan-fungal ITS2 region. Blood samples were used to genotype immune modulating genes. Clinical metadata was collected to determine the clinical predictors of the abundance and diversity of the skin mycobiome.
RESULTS: The neonatal mycobiome is characterized by few taxa. Alpha diversity of the mycobiome is influenced by antibiotic exposure, the forehead body site, and the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) environment. Beta diversity varies with mode of delivery, diet, and body site. The host determinants of the cutaneous microbiome include single-nucleotide polymorphisms in TLR4, NLRP3,CARD8, and NOD2.
CONCLUSION: The neonatal cutaneous mycobiome is composed of few genera and is influenced by clinical factors and host genetics, the understanding of which will inform preventive strategies against invasive fungal infections.
Journal Title
Pediatric research
Volume
88
Issue
2
First Page
225
Last Page
233
Recommended Citation
Paul AA, Hoffman KL, Hagan JL, Sampath V, Petrosino JF, Pammi M. Fungal cutaneous microbiome and host determinants in preterm and term neonates. Pediatr Res. 2020;88(2):225-233. doi:10.1038/s41390-019-0719-7