Exposure to diesel exhaust alters the functional metagenomic composition of the airway microbiome in former smokers
The lung microbiome plays a crucial role in airway homeostasis, yet we know little about the effects of exposures such as air pollution therein. We conducted a controlled human exposure study to assess the impact of diesel exhaust (DE) on the human airway microbiome. Twenty-four participants (former...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental research 2023-01, Vol.216 (Pt 4), p.114826-114826, Article 114826 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The lung microbiome plays a crucial role in airway homeostasis, yet we know little about the effects of exposures such as air pollution therein.
We conducted a controlled human exposure study to assess the impact of diesel exhaust (DE) on the human airway microbiome. Twenty-four participants (former smokers with mild to moderate COPD (N = 9), healthy former smokers (N = 7), and control healthy never smokers (N = 8)) were exposed to DE (300 μg/m3 PM2.5) and filtered air (FA) for 2 h in a randomized order, separated by a 4-week washout. Endobronchial brushing samples were collected 24 h post-exposure and sequenced for the 16S microbiome, which was analyzed using QIIME2 and PICRUSt2 to examine diversity and metabolic functions, respectively.
DE exposure altered airway microbiome metabolic functions in spite of statistically stable microbiome diversity. Affected functions included increases in: superpathway of purine deoxyribonucleosides degradation (pathway differential abundance 743.9, CI 95% 201.2 to 1286.6), thiazole biosynthesis I (668.5, CI 95% 139.9 to 1197.06), and L-lysine biosynthesis II (666.5, CI 95% 73.3 to 1257.7). There was an exposure-by-age effect, such that menaquinone biosynthesis superpathways were the most enriched function in the microbiome of participants aged >60, irrespective of smoking or health status. Moreover, exposure-by-phenotype analysis showed metabolic alterations in former smokers after DE exposure.
These observations suggest that DE exposure induced substantial changes in the metabolic functions of the airway microbiome despite the absence of diversity changes.
•Diesel exhaust (DE) exposure altered airway microbiome metabolic functions.•Some functions were enriched in the microbiome of participants aged >60.•There were greater alterations in former smokers' airway microbiome.•Our results suggested the microbiome's role in the airways response to DE. |
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ISSN: | 0013-9351 1096-0953 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114826 |