The respiratory microbiota and its impact on health and disease in dogs and cats: A One Health perspective

J Vet Intern Med. 2023 Sep-Oct;37(5):1641-1655. doi: 10.1111/jvim.16824. Epub 2023 Aug 8.

Abstract

Healthy lungs were long thought of as sterile, with presence of bacteria identified by culture representing contamination. Recent advances in metagenomics have refuted this belief by detecting rich, diverse, and complex microbial communities in the healthy lower airways of many species, albeit at low concentrations. Although research has only begun to investigate causality and potential mechanisms, alterations in these microbial communities (known as dysbiosis) have been described in association with inflammatory, infectious, and neoplastic respiratory diseases in humans. Similar studies in dogs and cats are scarce. The microbial communities in the respiratory tract are linked to distant microbial communities such as in the gut (ie, the gut-lung axis), allowing interplay of microbes and microbial products in health and disease. This review summarizes considerations for studying local microbial communities, key features of the respiratory microbiota and its role in the gut-lung axis, current understanding of the healthy respiratory microbiota, and examples of dysbiosis in selected respiratory diseases of dogs and cats.

Keywords: asthma; lung; microbiome; nasal; pneumonia.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cat Diseases*
  • Cats
  • Dog Diseases*
  • Dogs
  • Dysbiosis / microbiology
  • Dysbiosis / veterinary
  • Humans
  • Lung / microbiology
  • Microbiota*
  • One Health*
  • Respiratory Tract Diseases* / veterinary