Acta Dermato-Venereologica 98-9CompleteContent | Page 17
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SHORT COMMUNICATION
Chlamydiales Bacterial Sequences in Lesional and Healthy Skin of Patients with Parapsoriasis
Kati HOKYNAR 1 , Alexander SALAVA 2 , Eero VESTERINEN 3,4 , Antti LAUERMA 2 , Annamari RANKI 2 and Mirja PUOLAKKAINEN 1
Department of Virology and 4 Spatial Foodweb Ecology Group, The Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, PO Box 21,
FIN-00014 Helsinki, 2 Department of Dermatology, Allergology and Venereal Diseases, University of Helsinki and Center of Inflammation,
Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, and 3 Biodiversity Unit, University of Turku, Turku, Finland. E-mail: [email protected]
1
Accepted Jun 26, 2018; Epub ahead of print Jun 29, 2018
Chlamydia-related bacteria represent a diverse group
of bacteria within the order Chlamydiales that have
been detected ubiquitously in various environmental
samples, such as soil and water, in animals, and also in
humans (1–6). We recently demonstrated the presence
of Chlamydiales DNA in human skin (7). Chlamydiales
DNA could be detected in > 50% of all the skin biopsies
studied, but the prevalence was higher and the type range
was wider in biopsies from individuals with a suspected
tick-related skin condition, compared with biopsies from
healthy skin (8).
Parapsoriasis is part of the continuum of cutaneous
lymphoproliferative disorders of unknown aetiology and
is clinically classified into small-plaque parapsoriasis
(SPP) and large-plaque parapsoriasis (LPP) (9). This
study examined the prevalence, distribution and relative
abundance of Chlamydiales DNA in skin biopsies and
skin swab samples, both from lesional and contralateral
healthy skin, from 13 patients with parapsoriasis (6 SPP,
7 LPP; see Appendix S1 1 ). The clinical characteristics
and skin microbiome data for these patients have been
reported earlier (10).
RESULTS
No Chlamydiales sequences were detected among the
previous microbiome data (10) when searched speci-
fically for Chlamydiales sequences (Appendix S1 1 ).
Nonetheless, using a Chlamydiales-specific method,
12/13 (92%) patients with SPP or LPP had Chlamydiales
DNA in the skin swabs taken from the lesional site and
11 (85%) in swabs from the contralateral healthy skin.
The prevalence of Chlamydiales DNA was lower in
the biopsy specimens than in the swab specimens: 77%
and 54% of the patients had Chlamydiales DNA in the
biopsies of lesional and control skin areas, respectively.
In swabs from both lesional and healthy skin, the
majority of the Chlamydiales sequences remained un-
classified (Table I and Table SI 1 ). In BLAST analysis,
Parachlamydiaceae (24%), Criblamydiaceae (18%) and
Simkaniaceae (6–12%) were the closest established Chla-
mydiales families (with ≥ 90% identity) for sequences
present in swabs from both healthy skin and parapsoriasis
lesions (Table I and Table SI 1 ). In skin biopsies, Parachla-
https://www.medicaljournals.se/acta/content/abstract/10.2340/00015555-2999
1
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2999
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 898–899
Table I. Chlamydiales families in the sequenced pan-Chlamydiales
PCR-positive skin samples
PanChlamydiales-PCR and
sequencing Swab
lesion
n (%) Swab
control a
n (%) Biopsy
lesion
n (%) Biopsy
control a
n (%)
Patients with positive results 12 (92) 11 (85) 10 (77) 7 (54)
Positive PCR results b
Readable Chlamydiales sequence
Parachlamydiaceae
Criblamydiaceae
Simkaniaceae
Chlamydiaceae 19
17
4 (24)
3 (18)
1 (6)
0 19
17
4 (24)
3 (18)
2 (12)
1 (6) 11
9
4 (44)
3 (33)
0
0 7
7
3 (43)
0
2 (29)
0
Unclassified Chlamydiales c 9 (53) 7 (41) 2 (22) 2 (29)
Unclassified Chlamydiales were prevalent in skin. Members of the Parachlamydiaceae
and Criblamydiaceae families were the most common lineages
a
Control: a specimen of healthy skin from the contralateral side of body. b Swab
specimens (2 from each patient) and biopsies were tested in duplicate. c Chlamydiales
sequences that could not be classified into currently established families.
mydiaceae sequences were detected in both healthy and
parapsoriatic skin (up to 44% of all sequences), while
Criblamydiaceae sequences were detected only in le-
sional (33%) and Simkaniaceae (29%) only in healthy
skin biopsies. No difference in the sequence heterogene-
ity was observed between SPP and LPP. Interestingly,
using sequence analysis, heterogeneous Chlamydiales
sequences were seen in the duplicate samples (both swabs
and biopsies), suggesting that several types of Chla-
mydiales can be present simultaneously in skin. The ΔCt
values (Ct panchlamydiales – Ct betaglobin ) were smaller in swabs
than in biopsies, indicating that the relative quantity of
Chlamydiales DNA was higher in swab samples than in
biopsy samples (p < 0.0001) (Fig. S1 1 ).
DISCUSSION
This study confirmed that skin contains detectable
amounts of Chlamydiales DNA. Earlier, we showed that
skin microbiomes in parapsoriasis lesions and healthy
skin were very similar, suggesting that parapsoriasis
is not associated with alterations in the composition of
patient’s cutaneous bacterial community, but interper-
sonal variation was significant (10). In that study, Chla-
mydiales DNA was not detected, as the 16S rRNA gene
sequences of the Chlamydiales order differ from those of
other bacteria, and primers used in pan-bacterial PCRs
often fail in detection of Chlamydiales (2). Indeed, Chla-
mydiales DNA was frequently detected in skin samples,
when Chlamydiales-specific primers were used. It is also
possible that the quantity of Chlamydiales sequences is
low and outnumbered by the other bacteria.
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