Rapid adaptation drives invasion of airway donor microbiota by Pseudomonas after lung transplantation
In cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, chronic airway infection by Pseudomonas leads to progressive lung destruction ultimately requiring lung transplantation (LT). Following LT, CF-adapted Pseudomonas strains, potentially originating from the sinuses, may seed the allograft leading to infections and red...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2017-01, Vol.7 (1), p.40309-40309, Article 40309 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, chronic airway infection by
Pseudomonas
leads to progressive lung destruction ultimately requiring lung transplantation (LT). Following LT, CF-adapted
Pseudomonas
strains, potentially originating from the sinuses, may seed the allograft leading to infections and reduced allograft survival. We investigated whether CF-adapted
Pseudomonas
populations invade the donor microbiota and adapt to the non-CF allograft. We collected sequential
Pseudomonas
isolates and airway samples from a CF-lung transplant recipient during two years, and followed the dynamics of the microbiota and
Pseudomonas
populations. We show that
Pseudomonas
invaded the host microbiota within three days post-LT, in association with a reduction in richness and diversity. A dominant mucoid and hypermutator
mutL
lineage was replaced after 11 days by non-mucoid strains. Despite antibiotic therapy,
Pseudomonas
dominated the allograft microbiota until day 95. We observed positive selection of pre-LT variants and the appearance of novel mutations. Phenotypic adaptation resulted in increased biofilm formation and swimming motility capacities.
Pseudomonas
was replaced after 95 days by a microbiota dominated by
Actinobacillus
. In conclusion, mucoid
Pseudomonas
adapted to the CF-lung remained able to invade the allograft. Selection of both pre-existing non-mucoid subpopulations and of novel phenotypic traits suggests rapid adaptation of
Pseudomonas
to the non-CF allograft. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/srep40309 |