Martínez Inés, Stegen James C, Maldonado-Gómez Maria X, Eren A Murat, Siba Peter M, Greenhill Andrew R, Walter Jens
Department of Agriculture, Food, and Nutritional Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E1, Canada; Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA.
Biological Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA 99352, USA.
Cell Rep. 2015 Apr 28;11(4):527-38. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2015.03.049. Epub 2015 Apr 16.
Although recent research revealed an impact of westernization on diversity and composition of the human gut microbiota, the exact consequences on metacommunity characteristics are insufficiently understood, and the underlying ecological mechanisms have not been elucidated. Here, we have compared the fecal microbiota of adults from two non-industrialized regions in Papua New Guinea (PNG) with that of United States (US) residents. Papua New Guineans harbor communities with greater bacterial diversity, lower inter-individual variation, vastly different abundance profiles, and bacterial lineages undetectable in US residents. A quantification of the ecological processes that govern community assembly identified bacterial dispersal as the dominant process that shapes the microbiome in PNG but not in the US. These findings suggest that the microbiome alterations detected in industrialized societies might arise from modern lifestyle factors limiting bacterial dispersal, which has implications for human health and the development of strategies aimed to redress the impact of westernization.
尽管最近的研究揭示了西方化对人类肠道微生物群的多样性和组成的影响,但对元群落特征的确切后果了解不足,其潜在的生态机制也尚未阐明。在这里,我们比较了巴布亚新几内亚(PNG)两个非工业化地区成年人与美国居民的粪便微生物群。巴布亚新几内亚人拥有细菌多样性更高、个体间差异更小、丰度分布差异很大以及在美国居民中无法检测到的细菌谱系的群落。对控制群落组装的生态过程进行量化后发现,细菌扩散是塑造巴布亚新几内亚微生物群的主要过程,但在美国并非如此。这些发现表明,在工业化社会中检测到的微生物群改变可能源于限制细菌扩散的现代生活方式因素,这对人类健康以及旨在纠正西方化影响的策略制定具有启示意义。