Investigator

Filipa Godoy-Vitorino

Chair and Professor · Universidad de Puerto Rico Escuela de Medicina, Microbiology and Immunology

FGFilipa Godoy-Vito…
Papers(1)
Inflammatory cytokine…
Collaborators(2)
Ana M. EspinoEduardo Tosado-Rodríg…
Institutions(2)
Indiana University Sc…University of Puerto …

Papers

Inflammatory cytokines and a diverse cervicovaginal microbiota associate with cervical dysplasia in a cohort of Hispanics living in Puerto Rico

Cervical cancer (CC) is women’s fourth most common cancer worldwide. A worrying increase in CC rates in Hispanics suggests that besides Human papillomavirus infections, there may be other cofactors included in the epithelial microenvironment that could play a role in promoting the disease. We hypothesized that the cervical microbiome and the epithelial microenvironment favoring inflammation is conducive to disease progression in a group of Hispanics attending gynecology clinics in Puerto Rico. Few studies have focused on the joint microbiota and cytokine profile response in Hispanics outside the US, especially regarding the development of precancerous lesions. We aimed to investigate the relationship between the cervicovaginal microbiome and inflammation in Hispanic women living in PR while considering cervical dysplasia and HPV genotype risk. Cervical samples collected from 91 participants coming to gynecology clinics in San Juan, underwent 16S rRNA genes (V4 region) profiling, and cytokines were measured using Luminex MAGPIX technology. Cytokines were grouped as inflammatory (IL-1β, TNFα, IFNγ, IL-6), anti-inflammatory (IL- 4, IL-10, TGFβ1), and traffic-associated (IL-8, MIP1a, MCP1, IP10). They were related to microbes via an inflammation scoring index based on the quartile and tercile distribution of the cytokine’s concentration. We found significant differences in the diversity and composition of the microbiota according to HPV type according to carcinogenic risk, cervical disease, and cytokine abundance. Community State Types (CSTs) represents a profile of microbial communities observed within the vaginal microbiome ecological niche, and Lactobacillus-depleted CST IV had ~ 90% dominance in participants with high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions and high-risk HPV. The increasing concentration of pro-inflammatory cytokines was associated with a decrease in L. crispatus. In contrast, dysbiosis-associated bacteria such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Atopobium concomitantly increased with pro-inflammatory cytokines. Our study highlights that the cervical microbiota of Hispanics living in Puerto Rico is composed mostly of diverse CST profiles with decreased Lactobacillus and is associated with a higher pro-inflammatory environment. The joint host-microbe interaction analyses via cytokine and microbiota profiling have very good translational potential.

108Works
1Papers
2Collaborators

Positions

2018–

Chair and Professor

Universidad de Puerto Rico Escuela de Medicina · Microbiology and Immunology

2015–

Member of the Literature Selection Technical Review Committee

National Library of Medicine · NLM

Education

2012

Postdoctoral Fellow

DOE Joint Genome Institute · Microbial Systems Group

2009

Ph.D.

University of Puerto Rico in Rio Piedras · Biology

2002

EU Socrates Erasmus Programme Fellow

Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria · Center of Marine Biotechnology

2002

Licenciatura (pre-Bologna)

Universidade do Porto · Faculdade de Ciencias