Surveillance and phylogenetic analysis of a pathogenic bacterium candidate in nasal discharge from children
Kazumasa Fukuda, Kaoru Haro, Kei Yamasaki, Hiroaki Ikegami, Mitsumasa Saito

TL;DR
A candidate pathogenic bacterium called IOLA was found in children's nasal discharge, suggesting it spreads among them and may be linked to adult respiratory diseases.
Contribution
This study identifies five phylotypes of IOLA in children and links one to adult respiratory infections, suggesting horizontal transmission and potential clinical relevance.
Findings
IOLA was detected in 5.4% of pediatric nasal discharge samples in Japan.
Five distinct phylotypes of IOLA were identified through phylogenetic analysis.
IOLA detection was higher in children aged 2–3 and 6 years, suggesting age-related transmission patterns.
Abstract
“The infectious organism lurking in human airways (IOLA)” is a candidate pathogenic bacterium detected in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid specimens derived from adult patients with chronic lower respiratory tract infections. Genomic analyses of IOLA have revealed that it possesses the smallest and most AT-rich genome among human-derived bacteria. However, its biological properties remain unclear because no culture method has been established for IOLA. Here, we conducted a large-scale IOLA surveillance study of nasal discharge specimens from children in Japan and investigated the correlation between IOLA detection frequency and patient characteristics. We detected IOLA in 5.4% (103 of 1,920) of pediatric nasal discharge samples. No significant differences were observed in the frequency of detection based on the patient’s background. However, with respect to age, the frequency of detection…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Pediatric health and respiratory diseases · Respiratory viral infections research
