Dysbiosis of Skin Microbiota in Psoriatic Patients: Co-occurrence of Fungal and Bacterial Communities

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, whose pathogenesis involves dysregulated interplay among immune cells, keratinocytes and environmental triggers, including microbiota. Bacterial and fungal dysbiosis has been recently associated with several chronic immune-mediated diseases including...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in microbiology 2019-03, Vol.10, p.438-438
Hauptverfasser: Stehlikova, Zuzana, Kostovcik, Martin, Kostovcikova, Klara, Kverka, Miloslav, Juzlova, Katerina, Rob, Filip, Hercogova, Jana, Bohac, Petr, Pinto, Yishay, Uzan, Atara, Koren, Omry, Tlaskalova-Hogenova, Helena, Jiraskova Zakostelska, Zuzana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, whose pathogenesis involves dysregulated interplay among immune cells, keratinocytes and environmental triggers, including microbiota. Bacterial and fungal dysbiosis has been recently associated with several chronic immune-mediated diseases including psoriasis. In this comprehensive study, we investigated how different sampling sites and methods reflect the uncovered skin microbiota composition. After establishing the most suitable approach, we further examined correlations between bacteria and fungi on the psoriatic skin. We compared microbiota composition determined in the same sample by sequencing two distinct hypervariable regions of the 16S rRNA gene. We showed that using the V3V4 region led to higher species richness and evenness than using the V1V2 region. In particular, genera, such as and were more abundant when using the V3V4 region, while , on the other hand, were detected only by the V1V2 region. We performed a detailed analysis of skin microbiota composition of psoriatic lesions, unaffected psoriatic skin, and healthy control skin from the back and elbow. Only a few discriminative features were uncovered, mostly specific for the sampling site or method (swab, scraping, or biopsy). Swabs from psoriatic lesions on the back and the elbow were associated with increased abundance of and and , respectively. In the same samples from psoriatic lesions, we found a significantly higher abundance of the fungus on the back, while dominated the elbow mycobiota. In psoriatic elbow skin, we found significant correlation between occurrence of , , and with , which was not observed in healthy skin. For the first time, we showed here a psoriasis-specific correlation between fungal and bacterial species, suggesting a link between competition for niche occupancy and psoriasis. However, it still remains to be elucidated whether observed microbial shift and specific inter-kingdom relationship pattern are of primary etiological significance or secondary to the disease.
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2019.00438