Profiling of vaginal Lactobacillus jensenii isolated from preterm and full-term pregnancies reveals strain-specific factors relating to host interaction

Author:

Nori Sai Ravi Chandra1234ORCID,McGuire Tara K.1,Lawton Elaine M.1,McAuliffe Fionnuala M.5ORCID,Sinderen Douwe Van43ORCID,Walsh Calum J.6ORCID,Cotter Paul D.314ORCID,Feehily Conor71ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Teagasc Food Research Centre, Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland

2. SFI Centre for Research Training in Genomics Data Science, School of Mathematics, Statistics & Applied Mathematics, University of Galway, Galway, Ireland

3. APC Microbiome Ireland, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

4. School of Microbiology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

5. UCD Perinatal Research Centre, School of Medicine, University College Dublin, National Maternity Hospital, Dublin, Ireland

6. Department of Microbiology & Immunology, Peter Doherty Institute for Infection & Immunity, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

7. Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

Abstract

Each year, 15 million infants are born preterm (<37 weeks gestation), representing the leading cause of mortality for children under the age of five. Whilst there is no single cause, factors such as maternal genetics, environmental interactions, and the vaginal microbiome have been associated with an increased risk of preterm birth. Previous studies show that a vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus is, in contrast to communities containing a mixture of genera, associated with full-term birth. However, this binary principle does not fully consider more nuanced interactions between bacterial strains and the host. Here, through a combination of analyses involving genome-sequenced isolates and strain-resolved metagenomics, we identify that L. jensenii strains from preterm pregnancies are phylogenetically distinct from strains from full-term pregnancies. Detailed analysis reveals several genetic signatures that distinguish preterm birth strains, including genes predicted to be involved in cell wall synthesis, and lactate and acetate metabolism. Notably, we identify a distinct gene cluster involved in cell surface protein synthesis in our preterm strains, and profiling the prevalence of this gene cluster in publicly available genomes revealed it to be predominantly present in the preterm-associated clade. This study contributes to the ongoing search for molecular biomarkers linked to preterm birth and opens up new avenues for exploring strain-level variations and mechanisms that may contribute to preterm birth.

Funder

Science Foundation Ireland

Irish Research Council

Horizon 2020

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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