The impact of oxygen content on Staphylococcus epidermidis pathogenesis in ocular infection based on clinical characteristics, transcriptome and metabolome analysis

Front Microbiol. 2024 Jul 10:15:1409597. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1409597. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Introduction: This study aims to delineate the etiology and prevalence of isolated pathogens, along with the clinical characteristics of endophthalmitis patients over a 9-year period at hospital in Southwest of China. Additionally, we investigating the metabolic and cellular processes related to environmental factors may offer novel insights into endophthalmitis.

Methods: We analyzed data pertaining to endophthalmitis patients treated at the Affiliated Hospital of Yunnan University from 2015 to 2023. According to our clinical data, we conducted an experiment based on transcriptomics and metabolomics analysis to verify whether environmental factors affect behavior of S. epidermidis by culturating S. epidermidis under oxic and microoxic condition.

Results: In this study, 2,712 fungi or bacteria strains have been analyzed, gram-positive bacteria constituted 65.08%, with S. epidermidis being the most predominant species (25.55%). Ophthalmic trauma was the primary pathogenic factor for S. epidermidis ocular infections. Regarding fluoroquinolones, S. epidermidis exhibited the higher resistance rate to levofloxacin than moxifloxacin. Moreover, our investigation revealed that S. epidermidis in microoxic environment increase in energy metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and membrane transport.

Conclusion: Our findings underscore the significance of S. epidermidis as a crucial pathogen responsible for infectious endophthalmitis. It is crucial to exercise vigilance when considering Levofloxacin as the first-line drug for empiric endophthalmitis treatment. The metabolites alteration observed during the commensal-to-pathogen conversion under microoxic condition serve as a pivotal environmental signal contributing to S. epidermidis metabolism remodeling, toward more pathogenic state.

Keywords: S. epidermidis; metabolomics; ocular infection; oxygen content; transcriptomic.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was partially supported by the Foundation of Yunnan Health Training Project of High Level Talents (grant number: H-2019046), the Young Academic and Technical Leaders of Yunnan Province (grant number: 202305AC160072), the Association Foundation Program of Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Department and Kunming Medical University (grant number: 202001AY070001-255), the Medical leading Talents Training Program of Yunnan Provincial Health Commission (grant number: L-2019029) and the program of “Double tops” from Yunnan Province and Yunnan University (grant number: 202201BF070001-012).