A large scale investigation of the vaginal metagenome and metabolome and their role in spontaneous preterm birth
阴道宏基因组和代谢组及其在自发性早产中的作用的大规模研究
基本信息
- 批准号:10461073
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 68.36万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2021
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2021-08-03 至 2026-07-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:16S ribosomal RNA sequencingAccountingAffectAlgorithmsBiologicalBiological MarkersCervix IncompetenceCharacteristicsClinicalClinical DataCommunitiesDataData AnalysesData SetDemographyDetectionDiagnosisEarly DiagnosisEarly identificationEarly treatmentEcosystemEtiologyFemaleFirst BirthsGeographyGoalsGrowthHeterogeneityHigh-Risk PregnancyInvestigationKnowledgeLeadMeasuresMediator of activation proteinMedicalMetabolicMetabolic PathwayMetabolismMetagenomicsMethodsMicrobeMicrobial GeneticsMicrobial TaxonomyModelingMulticenter TrialsNeonatal MortalityNulliparityPathologyPhenotypePregnancyPregnant WomenPremature BirthPrevalencePropertyRaceResearchResearch PersonnelResolutionResourcesRiskRoleSample SizeSamplingSecond Pregnancy TrimesterSwabSystemTaxonomyTherapeuticThird Pregnancy TrimesterTimeUnited StatesVaginaVariantWomanadverse pregnancy outcomebaseclinical applicationclinical translationcohortcomputer frameworkearly detection biomarkersexperiencegut microbiomehost microbiomeinnovationinsightlensmetabolomemetabolomicsmetagenomemetagenomic sequencingmicrobialmicrobial genomicsmicrobiomemicrobiome analysismicrobiome researchneonatal morbidityprematurepreterm premature rupture of membranespreventreproductive tractsmall moleculevaginal microbiome
项目摘要
ABSTRACT
Spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB) is a leading cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality. Despite extensive
research and medical efforts, we lack both the means to identify it early and the therapeutic options to prevent it
when identified. The vaginal microbiome is believed to have a causal role in a substantial fraction of sPTBs, and
multiple studies have shown that even when measured early in pregnancy, the microbiome is associated with
adverse pregnancy outcomes. Despite this great promise, robust microbiome-based predictors for sPTB have
not been developed yet, and we lack a detailed understanding of the mechanisms underlying its involvement in
sPTB. We attribute this to a small sample size in current studies; the aggregative definition of sPTB as a binary
variable, ignoring its heterogeneous presentations and etiologies; and a focus on microbial taxonomy instead of
data that is more functionally and mechanistically oriented. We propose to capitalize on one of the largest and
best-phenotyped pregnancy cohorts collected to date, the nuMoM2b study. This was a national, multi-center trial
that collected vaginal swabs at three time-points from women with diverse geographic and demographic
backgrounds. This study profiled nearly 500 women with sPTB, almost an order of magnitude more than any
previous microbiome study. We have compiled an interdisciplinary team with intimate knowledge of the
nuMoM2b study, ample experience in compiling, profiling, and analyzing large-scale microbiome and
metabolomic cohorts, and a track record of innovation in microbiome analysis and its clinical applications. We
will perform deep metagenomic sequencing, longitudinal sample sequencing, and matched metabolomic
analysis of a total of almost 6,000 samples from nearly 1,500 pregnant women, generating the largest such
dataset to date. This dataset would advance the microbiome community, drive discovery in the field, and enable
us and other researchers to study host-microbiome interactions, in general and specifically in the context of
sPTB, with an unprecedented depth. Our proposed data analysis offers a nuanced and high-resolution view of
both clinical and biological data. We will study sPTB while accounting for its various clinical presentations,
etiologies, and important maternal covariates. We will study the vaginal ecosystem from multiple angles,
investigating microbial genomic adaptations, levels of metabolites in the ecosystem, and dynamic changes to
the microbiome profile. We will devise an aggregative computational framework, based on state-of-the-art
methods and algorithms, that provides early prediction of sPTB based on microbiome-related features. We will
employ a combination of parametric and non-parametric methods to obtain mechanistic insights into host-
microbiome interactions that potentially contribute to sPTB and other adverse pregnancy outcomes. Altogether,
this study will be transformative to our understanding of the vaginal microbiome in adverse pregnancy outcomes
and of host-microbiome interactions in general.
摘要
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
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{{ truncateString('Tal Korem', 18)}}的其他基金
A large scale investigation of the vaginal metagenome and metabolome and their role in spontaneous preterm birth
阴道宏基因组和代谢组及其在自发性早产中的作用的大规模研究
- 批准号:
10665611 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 68.36万 - 项目类别:
A large scale investigation of the vaginal metagenome and metabolome and their role in spontaneous preterm birth
阴道宏基因组和代谢组及其在自发性早产中的作用的大规模研究
- 批准号:
10841978 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 68.36万 - 项目类别:
A large scale investigation of the vaginal metagenome and metabolome and their role in spontaneous preterm birth
阴道宏基因组和代谢组及其在自发性早产中的作用的大规模研究
- 批准号:
10280132 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 68.36万 - 项目类别:
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