Singh Rashmi, Haque Mohammed Monzoorul, Mande Sharmila S
Bio-Sciences R&D Division, TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services, Pune, India.
Front Microbiol. 2019 Dec 17;10:2874. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.02874. eCollection 2019.
Urbanization is a globally pervasive trend. Although urban settings provide better access to infrastructure and opportunities, urban lifestyles have certain negative consequences on human health. A number of recent studies have found interesting associations between the structure of human gut microbiota and the prevalence of metabolic conditions characterizing urban populations. The present study attempts to expand the footprint of these investigations to an Indian context. The objectives include elucidating specific patterns and gradients based on resident habitat and lifestyles (i.e., tribal and urban) that characterize gut microbial communities. Available 16S rRNA sequence datasets corresponding to the gut microbiota of urban and tribal populations from multiple regions of India have been rigorously compared. This analysis was carried out to understand the overall community structure, resident taxa, and their (inferred) functional components as well as their correlations with available meta-information. The gut microbiota of urban and tribal communities are observed to have characteristically different signatures with respect to diversity as well as taxonomic and functional composition. Primarily, the gut microbiota in tribal communities is found to harbor significantly higher species diversity and richness as compared to that in urban populations. In spite of geographical segregation and diet-related differences, gut microbial diversity was not found to differ significantly between tribal groups. Furthermore, while the taxonomic profiles of different tribal communities cluster together irrespective of their geographic location, enterotype analysis indicates that samples from urban communities form two distinct clusters. Taxonomic analysis of samples in one of these clusters reveals the presence of microbes that are common to both urban and tribal cohorts, indicating a probable transient evolutionary state. , previously reported to be the dominant genus resident in Indian gut microbiota, is found to have distinct OTUs and strain-specific oligotypes characterizing resident habitats and diet patterns. Certain interesting associations between microbial abundances and specific metadata have also been observed. Overall, urban lifestyle and diet appear to impact the structure and function of gut microbial communities, and the results of this study provide further evidence of this likely detrimental association. This study attempts to analyze, in an Indian context, the impact of urbanization on the human gut microbiota. Overall, the analysis elucidates interesting taxonomic and functional signatures characterizing the evolutionary transition in gut microbiota from tribal to urban.
城市化是一种全球普遍存在的趋势。尽管城市环境能提供更好的基础设施和机会,但城市生活方式对人类健康有一定的负面影响。最近的一些研究发现,人类肠道微生物群的结构与城市人群代谢状况的患病率之间存在有趣的关联。本研究试图将这些调查的范围扩展到印度背景下。目标包括阐明基于居住栖息地和生活方式(即部落和城市)的特定模式和梯度,这些模式和梯度是肠道微生物群落的特征。对来自印度多个地区的城市和部落人群肠道微生物群的可用16S rRNA序列数据集进行了严格比较。进行此分析是为了了解整体群落结构、常驻分类群及其(推断的)功能成分,以及它们与可用元信息的相关性。观察到城市和部落社区的肠道微生物群在多样性以及分类和功能组成方面具有明显不同的特征。主要地,发现部落社区的肠道微生物群比城市人群具有显著更高的物种多样性和丰富度。尽管存在地理隔离和饮食相关差异,但未发现部落群体之间的肠道微生物多样性有显著差异。此外,虽然不同部落社区的分类特征无论地理位置如何都聚集在一起,但肠型分析表明城市社区的样本形成两个不同的簇。对其中一个簇中的样本进行分类分析发现,存在城市和部落人群共有的微生物,表明可能处于短暂的进化状态。以前报道为印度肠道微生物群中占主导地位的属,被发现具有独特的操作分类单元和菌株特异性寡型,这些特征表征了居住栖息地和饮食模式。还观察到微生物丰度与特定元数据之间存在某些有趣的关联。总体而言,城市生活方式和饮食似乎会影响肠道微生物群落的结构和功能,本研究结果进一步证明了这种可能有害的关联。本研究试图在印度背景下分析城市化对人类肠道微生物群的影响。总体而言,该分析阐明了表征肠道微生物群从部落到城市进化转变的有趣分类和功能特征。