Abstract
AbstractAs part of the CHAPS randomized clinical trial, we sequenced a segment of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene from foreskin tissue of 144 adolescents from South Africa and Uganda collected during surgical penile circumcision after receipt of 1 to 2 doses of placebo, emtricitabine with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, or emtricitabine with tenofovir alafenamide. We found a large proportion ofCorynebacteriumin addition to other anaerobic species.Cutibacterium acneswas more abundant among participants from South Africa than Uganda, though this made no difference in surgical recovery. We did not find a difference in bacterial populations by treatment received nor bacterial taxa that were differentially abundant between participants who received placebo versus active drug. Using RNAseq libraries from foreskin tissue of the same participants, we found negative correlations between the relative abundance of bacterial taxa and the expression of genes downstream of the innate response to bacteria and regulation of the inflammatory response. When participants were divided into clusters based on bacterial community composition, two main clusters emerged which were distinguished by high and low bacterial diversity. Random forest classification showed higher expression ofNFATC3andSELENOSand lower expression ofSTAP1andNLRP6in the higher diversity group compared to the lower. Our results show no difference in the tissue microbiome of the foreskin with short-course PrEP but that bacterial taxa were largely inversely correlated with gene expression, consistent with non-inflammatory colonization.Author SummaryWe investigated the bacterial community of the foreskin of the penis. Previous studies found increased inflammation with certain anaerobic bacteria from swabs taken under the foreskin, but we found that higher relative abundances of the bacteria were correlated with lower expression of inflammatory genes. We did not find different bacteria in participants who received medicine to prevent HIV. Understanding the relationship between bacteria and inflammation in the penis will help us to understand how interventions like penile circumcision reduce the risk of acquiring sexually transmitted infections such as HIV.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory