African Microbiome Institute, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.
Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Nat Commun. 2024 Apr 20;15(1):3379. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-46265-0.
Transition from traditional high-fiber to Western diets in urbanizing communities of Sub-Saharan Africa is associated with increased risk of non-communicable diseases (NCD), exemplified by colorectal cancer (CRC) risk. To investigate how urbanization gives rise to microbial patterns that may be amenable by dietary intervention, we analyzed diet intake, fecal 16 S bacteriome, virome, and metabolome in a cross-sectional study in healthy rural and urban Xhosa people (South Africa). Urban Xhosa individuals had higher intakes of energy (urban: 3,578 ± 455; rural: 2,185 ± 179 kcal/d), fat and animal protein. This was associated with lower fecal bacteriome diversity and a shift from genera favoring degradation of complex carbohydrates (e.g., Prevotella) to taxa previously shown to be associated with bile acid metabolism and CRC. Urban Xhosa individuals had higher fecal levels of deoxycholic acid, shown to be associated with higher CRC risk, but similar short-chain fatty acid concentrations compared with rural individuals. Fecal virome composition was associated with distinct gut bacterial communities across urbanization, characterized by different dominant host bacteria (urban: Bacteriodota; rural: unassigned taxa) and variable correlation with fecal metabolites and dietary nutrients. Food and skin microbiota samples showed compositional differences along the urbanization gradient. Rural-urban dietary transition in South Africa is linked to major changes in the gut microbiome and metabolome. Further studies are needed to prove cause and identify whether restoration of specific components of the traditional diet will arrest the accelerating rise in NCDs in Sub-Saharan Africa.
在撒哈拉以南非洲的城市化社区中,从传统的高纤维饮食向西方饮食转变与非传染性疾病(NCD)风险增加有关,以结直肠癌(CRC)风险为例。为了研究城市化如何产生可能通过饮食干预来改善的微生物模式,我们在横断面研究中分析了健康的农村和城市科萨人(南非)的饮食摄入、粪便 16S 细菌组、病毒组和代谢组。城市科萨人摄入的能量(城市:3578±455;农村:2185±179kcal/d)、脂肪和动物蛋白更高。这与粪便细菌组多样性降低以及从有利于降解复杂碳水化合物的属(如普雷沃氏菌)转变为先前与胆汁酸代谢和 CRC 相关的分类群有关。城市科萨人的粪便脱氧胆酸水平较高,脱氧胆酸与较高的 CRC 风险相关,但与农村个体的短链脂肪酸浓度相似。粪便病毒组组成与城市化过程中的不同肠道细菌群落有关,其特征是不同的主要宿主细菌(城市:拟杆菌门;农村:未分类的分类群),与粪便代谢物和膳食营养素的相关性也不同。食物和皮肤微生物组样本沿城市化梯度显示出不同的组成差异。南非的城乡饮食转变与肠道微生物组和代谢组的重大变化有关。需要进一步的研究来证明因果关系,并确定恢复传统饮食的特定成分是否会阻止撒哈拉以南非洲 NCD 的加速上升。