Papillomavirus Research (Jun 2019)

The cervical microbiota in reproductive-age South African women with and without human papillomavirus infection

  • Harris Onywera,
  • Anna-Lise Williamson,
  • Zizipho Z.A. Mbulawa,
  • David Coetzee,
  • Tracy L. Meiring

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 154 – 163

Abstract

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In this study we examined potential associations of HPV infection with the cervical microbiota. Cervical samples were collected from 87 HIV-seronegative reproductive-age Black South African women. Microbiota were characterized by Illumina sequencing of the V3-V4 hypervariable regions of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene. Thirty seven (42.5%) and 30 (34.5%) of the women had prevalent HPV and high-risk (HR)-HPV, respectively. Only 23 women (26.4%) had cervical microbiota dominated by a single Lactobacillus species (L. crispatus (2/87 (2.3%)), L. jensenii (2/87 (2.3%)), and L. iners (19/87 (21.8%)). The majority of the women (56/87 (64.4%)) had diverse cervical microbiota consisting of mainly bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria. The remaining women (8/87 (9.2%)) had microbiota dominated by Aerococcus, Streptococcus, Chlamydia or Corynebacterium. Women with HR-HPV had significantly higher relative abundances of Aerococcaceae, Pseudomonadaceae and Bifidobacteriaceae compared to those with low-risk (LR)-HPV or no HPV-infection (LDA score >2.0, p 2.0, p 0.2). Further investigations of the bacterial taxa significantly enriched in HR-HPV-infected women are warranted. Keywords: High-risk HPV (HR-HPV), Cervical microbiota, Reproductive-age, African, Potential biomarkers