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Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC
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Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection

Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVIAdolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC

Page 2: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Questions study would address

• Following Influenza viral infection of the host, how is the bacterial community structure affected?

• Can we see a change in the bacterial community during the course of the infcetion?

• Once the host recovers from viral infection, how resilient is the bacterial community structure?

Page 3: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Influenza Genome Project

Page 4: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Pilot to determine best conditions

• 2 uninfected (ferrets “94” and “96”)– Nasal swab versus nasal wash– Day 0 and Day 2– Total specimens: 8

• 2 infected (ferrets “01” and “08”) + 1 uninfected control (“06”)– Nasal washes only– Day 0, Day 2, Day 3– Total specimens: 9

Page 5: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Replicates and controls

• Total of 17 specimens– 3 technical replicates of 16S amplicons– 2 regions for each: V1-V3 and V3-V5– For each round of PCR, 1 positive and 1 negative

control

• Total amplicons (test + controls): 114

• Sequencing: average of 4175 classifiable reads per sample

Page 6: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

STUDY 1Infected versus uninfected ferrets

Page 7: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Infected V1-V3

Page 8: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Infected V3-V5

Page 9: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Fuso

bacteriu

m

Porphyromonas

Control uninfected ferret: Day 0

Page 10: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ureaplasma

Cloacibacte

rium

Control uninfected ferret: Day 2

Page 11: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ureaplasma

Exiguobacte

rium

Control uninfected ferret: Day 3

Page 12: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

V1-V3

Page 13: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

V3-V5

Bacteria rank differently dependingon region studied

Page 14: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ferret “01”

Ferret “08”

Infected ferrets: Day 0

Page 15: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ferret “01”

Ferret “08”

Infected ferrets: Day 2

Page 16: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Ferret “01”

Ferret “08”

Infected ferrets: Day 3

Page 17: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

V1-V3

Page 18: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

V3-V5

Page 19: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Summary

• Important differences depending on region analyzed (V1-V3 vs V3-V5)

• Ferret effect

Page 20: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

STUDY 2Nasal Swab versus Wash

Page 21: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.
Page 22: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Wash captures more species than swab

Page 23: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

V1-V3 vs V3-V5:Some species overlap and many unique

captured by each region

Page 24: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Conclusions• Based on the results we have obtained thus far,

the nasal washes are recovering the greatest diversity using either 16S variable region and are likely to be the most useful samples going forward.

• Not surprisingly, each 16S variable region returns a slightly different result and one can argue for either region. The V1V3 in general performs better in the lab and it is the region of the 16S gene that is evolving faster than the remainder of the gene (so in theory more discrimination).

Page 25: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Teams

JCVIBarb Methe

Elodie GhedinKelvin Li

Monika BihanSana Scherbakova

Mt. SinaiAdolfo Garcia-

SastreRafael Medina

Funding:NIAID

Page 26: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Infected

V1-V3 V3-V5

Page 27: Ferret upper respiratory tract microbiome in influenza infection Barb Methe & Elodie Ghedin, JCVI Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Mt Sinai, NYC.

Uninfected