2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2012.11.013
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Asthma-associated differences in microbial composition of induced sputum

Abstract: Background It is increasingly evident that microbial colonization of the respiratory tract might have a role in the pathogenesis of asthma. Objective We sought to characterize and compare the microbiome of induced sputum in asthmatic and nonasthmatic adults. Methods Induced sputum samples were obtained from 10 nonasthmatic subjects and 10 patients with mild active asthma (8/10 were not using inhaled corticosteroids). Total DNA was extracted from sputum supernatants and amplified by using primers specific f… Show more

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Cited by 324 publications
(337 citation statements)
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“…In a cohort of asthmatic subjects with clinically stable but suboptimally controlled asthma (symptoms of respiratory tract infection or asthma exacerbation within 6 wk was an exclusion criteria), bronchial hyperresponsiveness was associated with increased bacterial burden and microbial diversity (number of different taxa in a sample) in airway brushing samples. Subjects with asthma also have an increase in proteobacteria in their sputum compared with healthy individuals (70). These data suggest that perturbations of the commensal microbial community might directly or indirectly influence the clinical phenotype in asthma and highlights the potential "pathogenic" role of commensal bacteria.…”
Section: Lessons Learned From the Study Of Airway Microbiota In Lungmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…In a cohort of asthmatic subjects with clinically stable but suboptimally controlled asthma (symptoms of respiratory tract infection or asthma exacerbation within 6 wk was an exclusion criteria), bronchial hyperresponsiveness was associated with increased bacterial burden and microbial diversity (number of different taxa in a sample) in airway brushing samples. Subjects with asthma also have an increase in proteobacteria in their sputum compared with healthy individuals (70). These data suggest that perturbations of the commensal microbial community might directly or indirectly influence the clinical phenotype in asthma and highlights the potential "pathogenic" role of commensal bacteria.…”
Section: Lessons Learned From the Study Of Airway Microbiota In Lungmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…For example, Smith and colleagues found that increased asthma in non-Hispanic blacks compared with non-Hispanic white children was detected only in the poorest children (7). In ethnicity-stratified models, Beckett and colleagues did not detect statistically significant relationships between maternal educational attainment and child asthma, and in a small high-risk cohort of children, an association between Hispanic ethnicity and asthma was attenuated when adjusted for SES factors (9,10).…”
Section: The Bronchial Microbiome and Asthma Phenotypesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Certain taxa related to this clinical finding included Proteobacteria, Pseudomonadaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Burkholderiaceae and Neisseriaceae [14]. Subsequent analysis of induced sputum from steroid naïve asthmatics compared with healthy subjects further confirmed greater bacterial diversity and higher proportions of Proteobacteria [15]. Several identified genera that demonstrate functional relevance to asthma include Sphingomonadaceae, which incite natural killer cell responses, Nitrosomonas possessing NO reductases, macrolide-susceptible Oxalobacter and Comamonadaceae capable of steroid metabolism [14].…”
Section: Immunosenescence and Inflammagingmentioning
confidence: 75%