The ocular surface microbiome of rhesus macaques
Joelle K Hass, Arthur G Fernandes, Mike J Montague, Armando Burgos-Rodriguez, Melween I Martinez, Lauren J N Brent, Noah Snyder-Mackler, John Danias, Gadi Wollstein, James P Higham, Amanda D Melin

TL;DR
This study explores the eye microbiome of rhesus macaques, finding that age, living conditions, and individual identity influence its diversity and composition.
Contribution
The first characterization of the ocular surface microbiome in rhesus macaques, revealing novel insights into primate microbiome dynamics.
Findings
Younger and free-ranging rhesus macaques showed higher ocular surface microbiome alpha diversity.
Individual identity and living conditions had the strongest influence on microbiome beta diversity.
Sex did not correlate with ocular surface microbiome variation.
Abstract
The ocular surface microbiome (OSM) is important for eye health, and variations in OSM composition have been associated with multiple diseases in humans. Studies of OSM-disease dynamics in humans are confounded by lifestyle factors. Animal models provide a complementary approach to understanding biological systems, free from many confounds of human studies. Here, we provide the first study of the OSM of rhesus macaques, a premier animal model for eye health and disease. We describe the taxonomy of the rhesus macaque OSM, and explore compositional correlations with age, sex, and living condition. We analyzed eyelid and conjunctival microbiota swabs from 132 individual rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) (57 males, 75 females, 1–26 years old) from one captive and one free-ranging group using 16S V3/V4 MiSeq sequencing. We investigated alpha diversity, beta diversity, and differential…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Surface and Contact Lens · Ocular Infections and Treatments · Connexins and lens biology
