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Identification of an intraocular microbiota

Authors :
Ping Lu
Xiaofeng Wen
Meifen Zhang
Ming Jin
Chan Zhao
Yanli Zou
Tingting Chen
Yu Liu
Richard W J Lee
Xinhua Huang
Li Miao
Ge Xiaofei
Weiyi Lai
Yinyin Li
Xiao Hu
Yuhua Deng
Jing Jing Li
Weirong Chen
Xiuli Deng
Haotian Lin
Chi-Chao Chan
Qinfen Zhang
Xiaofeng Lin
Chunmei Li
Yali Qin
Xiaomin Zhang
Dongni Wang
Xiaorong Li
Xun Wang
Xifang Li
Lin Lu
Guanghua Peng
Yan Li
Lai Wei
Yizhi Liu
Juanran Liang
Wei Chen
Liu Yang
Shixin Guo
Qiaoxing Liang
Bin Zou
Xiulan Zhang
Fuhua Yang
Source :
Cell Discovery, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2021), Cell Discovery
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

The current dogma in ophthalmology and vision research presumes the intraocular environment to be sterile. However, recent evidence of intestinal bacterial translocation into the bloodstream and many other internal organs including the eyes, found in healthy and diseased animal models, suggests that the intraocular cavity may also be inhabited by a microbial community. Here, we tested intraocular samples from over 1000 human eyes. Using quantitative PCR, negative staining transmission electron microscopy, direct culture, and high-throughput sequencing technologies, we demonstrated the presence of intraocular bacteria. The possibility that the microbiome from these low-biomass communities could be a contamination from other tissues and reagents was carefully evaluated and excluded. We also provide preliminary evidence that a disease-specific microbial signature characterized the intraocular environment of patients with age-related macular degeneration and glaucoma, suggesting that either spontaneous or pathogenic bacterial translocation may be associated with these common sight-threatening conditions. Furthermore, we revealed the presence of an intraocular microbiome in normal eyes from non-human mammals and demonstrated that this varied across species (rat, rabbit, pig, and macaque) and was established after birth. These findings represent the first-ever evidence of intraocular microbiota in humans.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20565968
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6f6141664cfd35d0d1d346d1d0eaf52