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Microbe-host interplay in atopic dermatitis and psoriasis.

Nanna FyhrquistGareth MuirheadStefanie Prast-NielsenMarine JeanmouginPeter OlahTiina SkoogGerome Jules-ClementMicha FeldMauricio Barrientos-SomarribasHanna SinkkoEllen H van den BogaardPatrick L J M ZeeuwenGijs RikkenJoost SchalkwijkHanna NiehuesWalter DäubenerSilvia Kathrin EllerHelen AlexanderDavide PenninoSari SuomelaIoannis TessasEmilia LybeckAnna M BaranHamid DarbanRoopesh Singh GangwarUlrich GerstelKatharina JahnPiia KarisolaLee YanBritta HansmannShintaro KatayamaStephan MellerMax BylesjöPhilippe HupéFrancesca Levi-SchafferDario GrecoAnnamari RankiJens-Michael SchröderJonathan BarkerJuha KereSophia TsokaAntti LauermaVassili SoumelisFrank O NestleBernhard HomeyBjorn AnderssonHarri Alenius
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Despite recent advances in understanding microbial diversity in skin homeostasis, the relevance of microbial dysbiosis in inflammatory disease is poorly understood. Here we perform a comparative analysis of skin microbial communities coupled to global patterns of cutaneous gene expression in patients with atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. The skin microbiota is analysed by 16S amplicon or whole genome sequencing and the skin transcriptome by microarrays, followed by integration of the data layers. We find that atopic dermatitis and psoriasis can be classified by distinct microbes, which differ from healthy volunteers microbiome composition. Atopic dermatitis is dominated by a single microbe (Staphylococcus aureus), and associated with a disease relevant host transcriptomic signature enriched for skin barrier function, tryptophan metabolism and immune activation. In contrast, psoriasis is characterized by co-occurring communities of microbes with weak associations with disease related gene expression. Our work provides a basis for biomarker discovery and targeted therapies in skin dysbiosis.
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