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人类饮食影响野生狒狒的肠道微生物组。

Human-influenced diets affect the gut microbiome of wild baboons.

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.

Department of Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, 82071, USA.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2023 Jul 23;13(1):11886. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-38895-z.

Abstract

Industrialized diets that incorporate processed foods and are often high in simple sugars and fats and low in fiber have myriad health impacts, many of which may operate via impacts on the gut microbiota. Examining how these diets affect the gut microbiota can be challenging given that lab animal models experience altered environmental contexts, and human studies include a suite of co-varying cultural and environmental factors that are likely to shape the gut microbiota alongside diet. To complement these approaches, we compare the microbiomes of wild populations of olive baboons (Papio anubis) with differential access to human trash high in processed foods, simple sugars, and fats in Rwanda's Akagera National Park. Baboons are a good model system since their microbiomes are compositionally similar to those of humans. Additionally, this population inhabits a common environment with different social groups consuming qualitatively different amounts of human trash, limiting variation in non-dietary factors. Using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing we find that baboons with unlimited access to human trash have reduced microbial alpha diversity and reduced relative abundances of fiber-degrading taxa such as Ruminococcaceae, Prevotellaceae, and Lachnospiraceae. In contrast, baboons with limited access to human trash have a microbiome more similar to that of baboons with no access to human trash. Our results suggest that while a human-influenced diet high in processed foods, simple sugars, and fats is sufficient to alter the microbiome in wild baboons, there is a minimum threshold of dietary alteration that must occur before the microbiome is substantially altered. We recommend that data from wild primate populations such as these be used to complement ongoing research on diet-microbiome-health interactions in humans and lab animal models.

摘要

工业化饮食,包括加工食品,通常富含简单糖和脂肪,而纤维含量低,对健康有诸多影响,其中许多可能通过对肠道微生物群的影响发挥作用。鉴于实验动物模型经历了改变的环境背景,而人类研究包括一系列共同变化的文化和环境因素,这些因素可能与饮食一起塑造肠道微生物群,因此研究这些饮食如何影响肠道微生物群具有挑战性。为了补充这些方法,我们比较了卢旺达阿加雷国家公园中具有不同人类垃圾处理方式的野生橄榄狒狒(Papio anubis)的微生物组,这些垃圾富含加工食品、简单糖和脂肪。狒狒是一个很好的模型系统,因为它们的微生物组在组成上与人类相似。此外,该种群栖息在一个共同的环境中,不同的社会群体消费不同数量的人类垃圾,限制了非饮食因素的变化。使用 16S rRNA 基因扩增子测序,我们发现,无限制接触人类垃圾的狒狒的微生物 α多样性降低,纤维降解类群如 Ruminococcaceae、Prevotellaceae 和 Lachnospiraceae 的相对丰度降低。相比之下,有限接触人类垃圾的狒狒的微生物组与没有接触人类垃圾的狒狒的微生物组更为相似。我们的研究结果表明,尽管富含加工食品、简单糖和脂肪的人类影响饮食足以改变野生狒狒的微生物组,但在微生物组发生实质性改变之前,必须发生最低限度的饮食改变。我们建议将这些野生灵长类动物种群的数据与人类和实验动物模型中饮食-微生物组-健康相互作用的持续研究相结合。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/030f/10363530/90ea835463c4/41598_2023_38895_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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