The international sinonasal microbiome study (ISMS): a multi-centre, multi-national collaboration characterising the microbial ecology of the sinonasal cavity

Author:

Paramasivan Sathish,Bassiouni AhmedORCID,Shiffer Arron,Dillon Matthew R,Cope Emily K,Cooksley Clare,Ali Mohammad Javed,Bleier Benjamin,Callejas Claudio,Cornet Marjolein E,Douglas Richard G,Dutra Daniel,Georgalas Christos,Harvey Richard J,Hwang Peter H,Luong Amber U,Schlosser Rodney J,Tantilipikorn Pongsakorn,Tewfik Marc A,Vreugde Sarah,Wormald Peter-John,Caporaso J GregoryORCID,Psaltis Alkis J

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe sinonasal microbiome remains poorly defined, with our current knowledge based on a few cohort studies whose findings are inconsistent. Furthermore, the variability of the sinus microbiome across geographical divides remains unexplored. We characterise the sinonasal microbiome and its geographical variations in both health and disease using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of 410 individuals from across the world. Although the sinus microbial ecology is highly variable between individuals, we identify a core microbiome comprised of Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Haemophilus, and Moraxella species in both healthy and chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) cohorts. Corynebacterium (mean relative abundance = 44.02%) and Staphylococcus (mean relative abundance = 27.34%) appear particularly dominant in the majority of patients sampled. There was a significant variation in microbial diversity between countries (p = 0.001). Amongst patients suffering from CRS with nasal polyps, a significant depletion of Corynebacterium (40.29% vs 50.43%; p = 0.02) and over-representation of Streptococcus (7.21% vs 2.73%; p = 0.032) was identified. The delineation of the sinonasal microbiome and standardised methodology described within our study will enable further characterisation and translational application of the sinus microbiota.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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