Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (May 2021)

Dysbiotic Fecal Microbiome in HIV-1 Infected Individuals in Ghana

  • Prince Kofi Parbie,
  • Prince Kofi Parbie,
  • Prince Kofi Parbie,
  • Taketoshi Mizutani,
  • Aya Ishizaka,
  • Ai Kawana-Tachikawa,
  • Ai Kawana-Tachikawa,
  • Ai Kawana-Tachikawa,
  • Lucky Ronald Runtuwene,
  • Sayuri Seki,
  • Christopher Zaab-Yen Abana,
  • Dennis Kushitor,
  • Evelyn Yayra Bonney,
  • Sampson Badu Ofori,
  • Satoshi Uematsu,
  • Satoshi Uematsu,
  • Satoshi Uematsu,
  • Seiya Imoto,
  • Seiya Imoto,
  • Yasumasa Kimura,
  • Hiroshi Kiyono,
  • Hiroshi Kiyono,
  • Hiroshi Kiyono,
  • Koichi Ishikawa,
  • William Kwabena Ampofo,
  • Tetsuro Matano,
  • Tetsuro Matano,
  • Tetsuro Matano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2021.646467
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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HIV-1 infected individuals under antiretroviral therapy can control viremia but often develop non-AIDS diseases such as cardiovascular and metabolic disorders. Gut microbiome dysbiosis has been indicated to be associated with progression of these diseases. Analyses of gut/fecal microbiome in individual regions are important for our understanding of pathogenesis in HIV-1 infections. However, data on gut/fecal microbiome has not yet been accumulated in West Africa. In the present study, we examined fecal microbiome compositions in HIV-1 infected adults in Ghana, where approximately two-thirds of infected adults are females. In a cross-sectional case-control study, age- and gender-matched HIV-1 infected adults (HIV+; n = 55) and seronegative controls (HIV-; n = 55) were enrolled. Alpha diversity of fecal microbiome in HIV+ was significantly reduced compared to HIV- and associated with CD4 counts. HIV+ showed reduction in varieties of bacteria including Faecalibacterium, the most abundant in seronegative controls, but enrichment of Proteobacteria. Ghanaian HIV+ exhibited enrichment of Dorea and Blautia; bacteria groups whose depletion has been reported in HIV-1 infected individuals in several other cohorts. Furthermore, HIV+ in our cohort exhibited a depletion of Prevotella, a genus whose enrichment has recently been shown in men having sex with men (MSM) regardless of HIV-1 status. The present study revealed the characteristics of dysbiotic fecal microbiome in HIV-1 infected adults in Ghana, a representative of West African populations.

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