Microbial and human transcriptome in vaginal fluid at midgestation: Association with spontaneous preterm delivery
Journal article, 2022

Background Intrauterine infection and inflammation caused by microbial transfer from the vagina are believed to be important factors causing spontaneous preterm delivery (PTD). Multiple studies have examined the relationship between the cervicovaginal microbiome and spontaneous PTD with divergent results. Most studies have applied a DNA-based assessment, providing information on the microbial composition but not transcriptional activity. A transcriptomic approach was applied to investigate differences in the active vaginal microbiome and human transcriptome at midgestation between women delivering spontaneously preterm versus those delivering at term. Methods Vaginal swabs were collected in women with a singleton pregnancy at 18 + 0 to 20 + 6 gestational weeks. For each case of spontaneous PTD (delivery <37 + 0 weeks) two term controls were randomized (39 + 0 to 40 + 6 weeks). Vaginal specimens were subject to sequencing of both human and microbial RNA. Microbial reads were taxonomically classified using Kraken2 and RefSeq as a reference. Statistical analyses were performed using DESeq2. GSEA and HUMAnN3 were used for pathway analyses. Results We found 17 human genes to be differentially expressed (false discovery rate, FDR < 0.05) in the preterm group (n = 48) compared to the term group (n = 96). Gene expression of kallikrein-2 (KLK2), KLK3 and four isoforms of metallothioneins 1 (MT1s) was higher in the preterm group (FDR < 0.05). We found 11 individual bacterial species to be differentially expressed (FDR < 0.05), most with a low occurrence. No statistically significant differences in bacterial load, diversity or microbial community state types were found between the groups. Conclusions In our mainly white population, primarily bacterial species of low occurrence were differentially expressed at midgestation in women who delivered preterm versus at term. However, the expression of specific human transcripts including KLK2, KLK3 and several isoforms of MT1s was higher in preterm cases. This is of interest, because these genes may be involved in critical inflammatory pathways associated with spontaneous PTD.

transcriptome

pregnancy

human microbiome

preterm birth

microbial community composition

infection

gene expression profiles

vagina

Author

Tove Wikstrom

University of Gothenburg

Sanna Abrahamsson

University of Gothenburg

Johan Bengtsson-Palme

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

University of Gothenburg

Joakim Ek

University of Gothenburg

Pihla Kuusela

Södra Älvsborg Hospital (SÄS)

Elham Rekabdar

University of Gothenburg

Peter Lindgren

Karolinska University Hospital

Karolinska Institutet

Ulla-Britt Wennerholm

University of Gothenburg

Bo Jacobsson

University of Gothenburg

Lil Valentin

Skåne University Hospital

Lund University

Henrik Hagberg

University of Gothenburg

Clinical and Translational Medicine

2001-1326 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 9 e1023

Subject Categories

Microbiology

Genetics

Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Medicine

DOI

10.1002/ctm2.1023

PubMed

36103557

More information

Latest update

10/25/2023