About this Research Topic
Changes in innate immunity, which may be due to genetic defects or overexpression, are common mechanisms by which recurrent otitis media occurs. Modulation of the middle ear microbiome is another way by which genetic variants predispose to otitis media and is, therefore, a potential pathway to discovery of new treatment options.
In order to improve our understanding of otitis media pathophysiology and its sequelae, this Frontiers Research Topic aims to explore the human host-microbial interaction within the middle ear and other related mucosal sites. Cutting-edge, trans-disciplinary research that either focus on or integrate bioinformatics, biostatistics, genetics, genomics, epigenetics, transcriptomics, proteomics, microbiology, and immunology, to name a few, using human, animal and microbial studies on otitis media are required to push the field forward.
In this Topic, we want to know (1) what genetic and/or immune characteristics of the mammalian host lead to otitis media, and (2) if there are particular combinations of commensal and pathogenic microbes, including microbial genomic changes, whether in the middle ear or other mucosal sites that further increase otitis media susceptibility. We welcome all forms of submissions: Original Research Articles, Review Articles, Method Articles, Clinical Trials, Case Reports, Mini-Review Articles, General Commentaries, Perspectives, Hypotheses & Theories.
Topic Editor Allen F. Ryan is co-founder of, shareholder in and uncompensated consultant to Otonomy. All other topic editors declare no competing interests with regards to the Research Topic subject
Keywords: 16S rRNA, epithelium, gene, genome, metagenome, microbiome, middle ear, mucosa, otitis media, virome
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.