Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2022 Jun 29;10(3):e0164321. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.01643-21. Epub 2022 May 19.
The study of the mammalian microbiome serves as a critical tool for understanding host-microbial diversity and coevolution and the impact of bacterial communities on host health. While studies of specific microbial systems (e.g., in the human gut) have rapidly increased, large knowledge gaps remain, hindering our understanding of the determinants and levels of variation in microbiomes across multiple body sites and host species. Here, we compare microbiome community compositions from eight distinct body sites among 17 phylogenetically diverse species of nonhuman primates (NHPs), representing the largest comparative study of microbial diversity across primate host species and body sites. Analysis of 898 samples predominantly acquired in the wild demonstrated that oral microbiomes were unique in their clustering, with distinctive divergence from all other body site microbiomes. In contrast, all other body site microbiomes clustered principally by host species and differentiated by body site within host species. These results highlight two key findings: (i) the oral microbiome is unique compared to all other body site microbiomes and conserved among diverse nonhuman primates, despite their considerable dietary and phylogenetic differences, and (ii) assessments of the determinants of host-microbial diversity are relative to the level of the comparison (i.e., intra-/inter-body site, -host species, and -individual), emphasizing the need for broader comparative microbial analyses across diverse hosts to further elucidate host-microbial dynamics, evolutionary and biological patterns of variation, and implications for human-microbial coevolution. The microbiome is critical to host health and disease, but much remains unknown about the determinants, levels, and evolution of host-microbial diversity. The relationship between hosts and their associated microbes is complex. Most studies to date have focused on the gut microbiome; however, large gaps remain in our understanding of host-microbial diversity, coevolution, and levels of variation in microbiomes across multiple body sites and host species. To better understand the patterns of variation and evolutionary context of host-microbial communities, we conducted one of the largest comparative studies to date, which indicated that the oral microbiome was distinct from the microbiomes of all other body sites and convergent across host species, suggesting conserved niche specialization within the Primates order. We also show the importance of host species differences in shaping the microbiome within specific body sites. This large, comparative study contributes valuable information on key patterns of variation among hosts and body sites, with implications for understanding host-microbial dynamics and human-microbial coevolution.
哺乳动物微生物组的研究是理解宿主-微生物多样性和共同进化以及细菌群落对宿主健康影响的重要工具。虽然对特定微生物系统(例如人类肠道)的研究迅速增加,但仍存在很大的知识差距,这阻碍了我们对多个体部位和宿主物种的微生物组在决定因素和变异水平上的理解。在这里,我们比较了 17 种非人类灵长类动物(NHPs)的 8 个不同体部位的微生物群落组成,这是对灵长类宿主物种和体部位的微生物多样性进行的最大比较研究。对主要在野外采集的 898 个样本的分析表明,口腔微生物组在聚类上是独特的,与所有其他体部位微生物组有明显的差异。相比之下,所有其他体部位的微生物组主要根据宿主物种聚类,并根据宿主物种内的体部位而有所不同。这些结果突出了两个关键发现:(i)与所有其他体部位的微生物组相比,口腔微生物组是独特的,并且在不同的非人类灵长类动物中是保守的,尽管它们在饮食和系统发育上存在很大差异;(ii)对宿主-微生物多样性决定因素的评估与比较的水平有关(即,个体内/个体间、宿主物种内和个体内),这强调了需要在不同宿主中进行更广泛的比较微生物分析,以进一步阐明宿主-微生物动态、进化和生物学变异模式以及对人类-微生物共同进化的影响。微生物组对宿主健康和疾病至关重要,但我们对宿主-微生物多样性的决定因素、水平和进化知之甚少。宿主与其相关微生物之间的关系很复杂。迄今为止,大多数研究都集中在肠道微生物组上;然而,我们对宿主-微生物多样性、共同进化以及多个体部位和宿主物种的微生物组的变异水平仍有很大的认识差距。为了更好地了解宿主-微生物群落的变异模式和进化背景,我们进行了迄今为止最大的比较研究之一,该研究表明口腔微生物组与所有其他体部位的微生物组不同,并且在宿主物种之间具有收敛性,这表明在灵长目动物目中存在保守的生态位特化。我们还表明,宿主物种差异在塑造特定体部位的微生物组方面很重要。这项大型的比较研究为宿主和体部位之间的关键变异模式提供了有价值的信息,对理解宿主-微生物动态和人类-微生物共同进化具有重要意义。