Lafollette School of Public Affairs, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2017 Dec 15;73(1):124-133. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbx029.
To test the feasibility of collecting and integrating data on the gut microbiome into one of the most comprehensive longitudinal studies of aging and health, the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS). The long-term goal of this integration is to clarify the contribution of social conditions in shaping the composition of the gut microbiota late in life. Research on the microbiome, which is considered to be of parallel importance to human health as the human genome, has been hindered by human studies with nonrandomly selected samples and with limited data on social conditions over the life course.
No existing population-based longitudinal study had collected fecal specimens. Consequently, we created an in-person protocol to collect stool specimens from a subgroup of WLS participants.
We collected 429 stool specimens, yielding a 74% response rate and one of the largest human samples to date.
The addition of data on the gut microbiome to the WLS-and to other population based longitudinal studies of aging-is feasible, under the right conditions, and can generate innovative research on the relationship between social conditions and the gut microbiome.
测试将肠道微生物组的数据收集和整合到最全面的衰老和健康纵向研究之一——威斯康星纵向研究(WLS)中的可行性。这一整合的长期目标是厘清社会条件对塑造生命后期肠道微生物组组成的影响。肠道微生物组与人类基因组同等重要,其相关研究受到了阻碍,原因是人类研究中的样本是随机选择的,而且对生命历程中社会条件的数据有限。
没有现有的基于人群的纵向研究收集过粪便样本。因此,我们创建了一个现场方案,从 WLS 参与者的一个子组中收集粪便样本。
我们收集了 429 份粪便样本,应答率为 74%,这是迄今为止最大的人类样本之一。
在适当的条件下,将肠道微生物组的数据添加到 WLS 中——以及其他基于人群的衰老纵向研究中——是可行的,并且可以在社会条件与肠道微生物组之间的关系方面产生创新性的研究。