College of Dentistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Microbiome. 2021 Feb 23;9(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s40168-020-00986-8.
The oral microbiota is acquired very early, but the factors shaping its acquisition are not well understood. Previous studies comparing monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins have suggested that host genetics plays a role. However, all twins share an equal portion of their parent's genome, so this model is not informative for studying parent-to-child transmission. We used a novel study design that allowed us to directly examine the genetics of transmission by comparing the oral microbiota of biological versus adoptive mother-child dyads.
No difference was observed in how closely oral bacterial community profiles matched for adoptive versus biological mother-child pairs, indicating little if any effect of host genetics on the fidelity of transmission. Both adopted and biologic children more closely resembled their own mother as compared to unrelated women, supporting the role of contact and environment. Mother-child strain similarity increased with the age of the child, ruling out early effects of host genetic influence that are lost over time. No effect on the fidelity of mother-child strain sharing from vaginal birth or breast feeding was seen. Analysis of extended families showed that fathers and mothers were equally similar to their children, and that cohabitating couples showed even greater strain similarity than mother-child pairs. These findings support the role of contact and shared environment, and age, but not genetics, as determinants of microbial transmission, and were consistent at both species and strain level resolutions, and across multiple oral habitats. In addition, analysis of individual species all showed similar results.
The host is clearly active in shaping the composition of the oral microbiome, since only a few of the many bacterial species in the larger environment are capable of colonizing the human oral cavity. Our findings suggest that these host mechanisms are universally shared among humans, since no effect of genetic relatedness on fidelity of microbial transmission could be detected. Instead our findings point towards contact and shared environment being the driving factors of microbial transmission, with a unique combination of these factors ultimately shaping the highly personalized human oral microbiome. Video abstract.
口腔微生物群是很早就获得的,但塑造其获得的因素尚不清楚。先前比较同卵(MZ)和异卵(DZ)双胞胎的研究表明,宿主遗传学起作用。然而,所有双胞胎都共享其父母基因组的相等部分,因此这种模型对于研究父母到孩子的传播没有信息。我们使用了一种新的研究设计,通过比较生物性和收养的母子对的口腔微生物群,直接研究了遗传对传播的影响。
在收养和生物性母子对之间,口腔细菌群落的相似性没有差异,表明宿主遗传学对传播的保真度几乎没有影响。与无关的女性相比,收养和亲生子女更像自己的母亲,这支持了接触和环境的作用。母子菌株相似性随孩子年龄的增加而增加,排除了随时间推移而丧失的宿主遗传影响的早期作用。从阴道分娩或母乳喂养中,母子菌株共享的保真度不受影响。对大家庭的分析表明,父亲和母亲与孩子的相似程度相等,同居夫妇的菌株相似性甚至高于母子对。这些发现支持接触和共享环境、年龄,但不是遗传作为微生物传播决定因素的作用,并且在物种和菌株水平分辨率以及多个口腔栖息地都是一致的。此外,对单个物种的分析也显示出相似的结果。
宿主显然积极参与塑造口腔微生物组的组成,因为在更大的环境中只有少数细菌物种能够定植人类口腔。我们的研究结果表明,这些宿主机制在人类中是普遍存在的,因为遗传相关性对微生物传播保真度没有影响。相反,我们的研究结果表明,接触和共享环境是微生物传播的驱动因素,这些因素的独特组合最终塑造了高度个性化的人类口腔微生物组。视频摘要。