Ruiz Lorena, Alba Claudio, García-Carral Cristina, Jiménez Esther A, Lackey Kimberly A, McGuire Michelle K, Meehan Courtney L, Foster James, Sellen Daniel W, Kamau-Mbuthia Elizabeth W, Kamundia Egidioh W, Mbugua Samwel, Moore Sophie E, Prentice Andrew M, Gindola K Debela, Otoo Gloria E, Pareja Rossina G, Bode Lars, McGuire Mark A, Williams Janet E, Rodríguez Juan M
Department of Nutrition and Food Science, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Margaret Ritchie School of Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, United States.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2021 Mar 25;11:622550. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.622550. eCollection 2021.
Recent work has demonstrated the existence of large inter-individual and inter-population variability in the microbiota of human milk from healthy women living across variable geographical and socio-cultural settings. However, no studies have evaluated the impact that variable sequencing approaches targeting different 16S rRNA variable regions may have on the human milk microbiota profiling results. This hampers our ability to make meaningful comparisons across studies. In this context, the main purpose of the present study was to re-process and re-sequence the microbiome in a large set of human milk samples (n = 412) collected from healthy women living at diverse international sites (Spain, Sweden, Peru, United States, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana and Kenya), by targeting a different 16S rRNA variable region and reaching a larger sequencing depth. Despite some differences between the results obtained from both sequencing approaches were notable (especially regarding alpha and beta diversities and Proteobacteria representation), results indicate that both sequencing approaches revealed a relatively consistent microbiota configurations in the studied cohorts. Our data expand upon the milk microbiota results we previously reported from the INSPIRE cohort and provide, for the first time across globally diverse populations, evidence of the impact that different DNA processing and sequencing approaches have on the microbiota profiles obtained for human milk samples. Overall, our results corroborate some similarities regarding the microbial communities previously reported for the INSPIRE cohort, but some differences were also detected. Understanding the impact of different sequencing approaches on human milk microbiota profiles is essential to enable meaningful comparisons across studies.
www.clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT02670278.
最近的研究表明,来自生活在不同地理和社会文化环境中的健康女性的母乳微生物群存在很大的个体间和群体间差异。然而,尚无研究评估针对不同16S rRNA可变区的可变测序方法可能对母乳微生物群分析结果产生的影响。这妨碍了我们在不同研究之间进行有意义比较的能力。在此背景下,本研究的主要目的是对从生活在不同国际地点(西班牙、瑞典、秘鲁、美国、埃塞俄比亚、冈比亚、加纳和肯尼亚)的健康女性收集的大量母乳样本(n = 412)中的微生物组进行重新处理和重新测序,通过靶向不同的16S rRNA可变区并达到更大的测序深度。尽管两种测序方法获得的结果之间存在一些差异(特别是在α和β多样性以及变形菌门的代表性方面),但结果表明,两种测序方法在所研究的队列中都揭示了相对一致的微生物群配置。我们的数据扩展了我们之前从INSPIRE队列报告的母乳微生物群结果,并首次在全球不同人群中提供了不同DNA处理和测序方法对母乳样本获得的微生物群谱的影响的证据。总体而言,我们的结果证实了之前报道的INSPIRE队列中微生物群落的一些相似之处,但也检测到了一些差异。了解不同测序方法对母乳微生物群谱的影响对于在不同研究之间进行有意义的比较至关重要。