Journal of Fungi (Jul 2021)

Analysis of Microbiota and Mycobiota in Fungal Ball Rhinosinusitis: Specific Interaction between <i>Aspergillus fumigatus</i> and <i>Haemophilus influenza</i>?

  • Sarah Dellière,
  • Eric Dannaoui,
  • Maxime Fieux,
  • Pierre Bonfils,
  • Guillaume Gricourt,
  • Vanessa Demontant,
  • Isabelle Podglajen,
  • Paul-Louis Woerther,
  • Cécile Angebault,
  • Françoise Botterel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof7070550
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. 550

Abstract

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Fungal ball (FB) rhinosinusitis (RS) is the main type of non-invasive fungal RS. Despite positive direct examination (DE) of biopsies, culture remains negative in more than 60% of cases. The aim of the study was to evaluate the performance/efficacy of targeted metagenomics (TM) to analyze microbiota and mycobiota in FB and find microbial associations. Forty-five sinus biopsies from patients who underwent surgery for chronic RS were included. After DE and culture, DNA was extracted, then fungal ITS1–ITS2 and bacterial V3–V4 16S rDNA loci were sequenced (MiSeqTM Illumina). Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were defined via QIIME and assigned to SILVA (16S) and UNITE (ITS) databases. Statistical analyses were performed using SHAMAN. Thirty-eight patients had FB and seven had non-fungal rhinosinusitis (NFRS). DE and culture of FB were positive for fungi in 97.3 and 31.6% of patients, respectively. TM analysis of the 38 FB yielded more than one fungal genus in 100% of cases, with Aspergillus in 89.5% (34/38). Haemophilus was over-represented in FB with >1000 reads/sample in 47.3% (18/38) compared to NFRS (p Haemophilus was associated with FB. Pathogenesis could result from fungi–bacteria interactions in a mixed biofilm-like structure.

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