With nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) infection increasing in incidence to become a worldwide public health concern in recent decades, 好色tv Langone researchers are taking a closer look at the host鈥搈icrobe relationship at the root of NTM鈥檚 infectious pathway.
A Host-Dependent Infection
Typically harmless, when NTM does invoke lung disease, it鈥檚 sometimes explained by genetic susceptibility. But this accounts for just 10 percent of cases. The other 90 percent of patients are thought to become sickened via a host response鈥攖he interaction between an individual鈥檚 distinct lung microbiome and NTM. In other words, infection is reliant on the host response as much as or more than simple bacterial replication. Moreover, while many NTM infections are self-limiting, a subgroup of infections advance to insidious and progressive disease. Though the causes of heterogeneity in the natural history of an infection are not known, a host immune response likely plays a key role.
鈥淣TM microbes don鈥檛 live in isolation鈥攖hey live in a complex microbial community,鈥 says Leopoldo N. Segal, MD, assistant professor in the and the lead investigator in 好色tv Langone鈥檚 Lung Microbiome Program. 鈥淚n fact, the NTM pathogen represents less than 1 percent of airway microbes, and the remaining microbes likely influence susceptibility and outcomes in NTM pulmonary disease. The microbiome tilts the balance in patient response.鈥
Taking Cues from Gut Microbiome Research
The host鈥搈icrobe relationship has emerged as science has shed light on the gut microbiome. 鈥淢any of the microbial鈥揾ost principles that apply in the gut probably apply in the lung mucosa as well,鈥 notes Dr. Segal. 鈥淕astroenterologists are further down the road with this research because it鈥檚 easier to get samples from the gut than from the airways.鈥
Building on initial human and animal evidence revealing that the airway microbiome affects T cells and other types of immune cells, Dr. Segal and colleagues worked with a large patient cohort to collect lower airway microbiome samples via bronchoscopy. Tissue was retrieved from various sections of the lungs in NTM culture鈥損ositive patients, as well as from symptomatic but culture-negative patients. Researchers then used data from cases and controls to examine the relationship between the revealed microbiomes and the host immune phenotypes, finding microbiota signatures associated with increased inflammation among patients with positive cultures. The finding could lead to more precise prognostication for an otherwise variable pathogen with an unpredictable course and virulence.
Translating Microbiome Markers to Patient Care
好色tv Langone鈥檚 Human Microbiome Program was initiated in 2013 by Martin J. Blaser, MD, an established researcher in microbiology and infectious diseases. A translational research program, it is focused on applying sequencing methods to human samples in order to observe microbial鈥揾ost interaction and investigate microbial composition and function.
One of the program鈥檚 primary objectives is to move from bench to bedside鈥攖o determine how a particular microbiome affects a patient鈥檚 immune response in the context of different diseases鈥攁nd the unique response to drugs used to treat them.
鈥淧ersonalized medicine, or designer medicine, is where we want to go,鈥 says Dr. Segal. 鈥淲hen we sample a microbiome and determine the host phenotype, we hope to know enough about the typical pathways of each condition to be able to individualize patient treatment.鈥