Eren A Murat, Sogin Mitchell L, Morrison Hilary G, Vineis Joseph H, Fisher Jenny C, Newton Ryan J, McLellan Sandra L
Josephine Bay Paul Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
School of Freshwater Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
ISME J. 2015 Jan;9(1):90-100. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2014.97. Epub 2014 Jun 17.
Delineating differences in gut microbiomes of human and animal hosts contributes towards understanding human health and enables new strategies for detecting reservoirs of waterborne human pathogens. We focused upon Blautia, a single microbial genus that is important for nutrient assimilation as preliminary work suggested host-related patterns within members of this genus. In our dataset of 57 M sequence reads of the V6 region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene in samples collected from seven host species, we identified 200 high-resolution taxonomic units within Blautia using oligotyping. Our analysis revealed 13 host-specific oligotypes that occurred exclusively in fecal samples of humans (three oligotypes), swine (six oligotypes), cows (one oligotype), deer (one oligotype), or chickens (two oligotypes). We identified an additional 171 oligotypes that exhibited differential abundance patterns among all the host species. Blautia oligotypes in the human population obtained from sewage and fecal samples displayed remarkable continuity. Oligotypes from only 10 Brazilian human fecal samples collected from individuals in a rural village encompassed 97% of all Blautia oligotypes found in a Brazilian sewage sample from a city of three million people. Further, 75% of the oligotypes in Brazilian human fecal samples matched those in US sewage samples, implying that a universal set of Blautia strains may be shared among culturally and geographically distinct human populations. Such strains can serve as universal markers to assess human fecal contamination in environmental samples. Our results indicate that host-specificity and host-preference patterns of organisms within this genus are driven by host physiology more than dietary habits.
描绘人类和动物宿主肠道微生物群的差异有助于理解人类健康,并为检测水源性人类病原体的储存库提供新策略。我们聚焦于布劳特氏菌属,这是一个单一的微生物属,对营养同化很重要,因为前期工作表明该属成员存在与宿主相关的模式。在我们从七个宿主物种收集的样本中对16S核糖体RNA基因V6区域的5700万条序列读数数据集里,我们使用寡核苷酸分型在布劳特氏菌属中鉴定出200个高分辨率分类单元。我们的分析揭示了13种宿主特异性寡型,它们仅出现在人类(三种寡型)、猪(六种寡型)、牛(一种寡型)、鹿(一种寡型)或鸡(两种寡型)的粪便样本中。我们还鉴定出另外171种寡型,它们在所有宿主物种中表现出不同的丰度模式。从污水和粪便样本中获得的人类群体中的布劳特氏菌属寡型显示出显著的连续性。仅从一个乡村个体收集的10份巴西人类粪便样本中的寡型就涵盖了来自一个三百万人口城市的巴西污水样本中发现的所有布劳特氏菌属寡型的97%。此外,巴西人类粪便样本中75%的寡型与美国污水样本中的寡型匹配,这意味着一组通用的布劳特氏菌菌株可能在文化和地理上不同的人类群体中共享。这些菌株可作为通用标记来评估环境样本中的人类粪便污染。我们的结果表明,该属生物的宿主特异性和宿主偏好模式更多地是由宿主生理而非饮食习惯驱动的。