Smits Samuel A, Leach Jeff, Sonnenburg Erica D, Gonzalez Carlos G, Lichtman Joshua S, Reid Gregor, Knight Rob, Manjurano Alphaxard, Changalucha John, Elias Joshua E, Dominguez-Bello Maria Gloria, Sonnenburg Justin L
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Human Food Project, 53600 Highway 118, Terlingua, TX 79852, USA.
Science. 2017 Aug 25;357(6353):802-806. doi: 10.1126/science.aan4834.
Although humans have cospeciated with their gut-resident microbes, it is difficult to infer features of our ancestral microbiome. Here, we examine the microbiome profile of 350 stool samples collected longitudinally for more than a year from the Hadza hunter-gatherers of Tanzania. The data reveal annual cyclic reconfiguration of the microbiome, in which some taxa become undetectable only to reappear in a subsequent season. Comparison of the Hadza data set with data collected from 18 populations in 16 countries with varying lifestyles reveals that gut community membership corresponds to modernization: Notably, the taxa within the Hadza that are the most seasonally volatile similarly differentiate industrialized and traditional populations. These data indicate that some dynamic lineages of microbes have decreased in prevalence and abundance in modernized populations.
尽管人类与其肠道内的微生物共同进化,但很难推断我们祖先微生物群的特征。在这里,我们研究了从坦桑尼亚哈扎狩猎采集者那里纵向收集的350份粪便样本的微生物群概况,这些样本采集时间超过一年。数据显示微生物群每年都会进行周期性的重新配置,其中一些分类群变得无法检测到,直到在随后的季节再次出现。将哈扎数据集与从16个国家18个不同生活方式的人群中收集的数据进行比较后发现,肠道群落成员与现代化程度相对应:值得注意的是,哈扎人群中季节性波动最大的分类群同样能够区分工业化人群和传统人群。这些数据表明,一些具有动态变化的微生物谱系在现代化人群中的流行率和丰度有所下降。