Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Harvard Chan Microbiome in Public Health Center, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
ISME J. 2024 Jan 8;18(1). doi: 10.1093/ismejo/wrae201.
The gut microbiome of companion animals is relatively underexplored, despite its relevance to animal health, pet owner health, and basic microbial community biology. Here, we provide the most comprehensive analysis of the canine and feline gut microbiomes to date, incorporating 2639 stool shotgun metagenomes (2272 dog and 367 cat) spanning 14 publicly available datasets (n = 730) and 8 new study populations (n = 1909). These are compared with 238 and 112 baseline human gut metagenomes from the Human Microbiome Project 1-II and a traditionally living Malagasy cohort, respectively, processed in a manner identical to the animal metagenomes. All microbiomes were characterized using reference-based taxonomic and functional profiling, as well as de novo assembly yielding metagenomic assembled genomes clustered into species-level genome bins. Companion animals shared 184 species-level genome bins not found in humans, whereas 198 were found in all three hosts. We applied novel methodology to distinguish strains of these shared organisms either transferred or unique to host species, with phylogenetic patterns suggesting host-specific adaptation of microbial lineages. This corresponded with functional divergence of these lineages by host (e.g. differences in metabolic and antibiotic resistance genes) likely important to companion animal health. This study provides the largest resource to date of companion animal gut metagenomes and greatly contributes to our understanding of the "One Health" concept of a shared microbial environment among humans and companion animals, affecting infectious diseases, immune response, and specific genetic elements.
尽管伴侣动物的肠道微生物组与动物健康、宠物主人健康和基础微生物群落生物学密切相关,但目前对其的研究还相对较少。在这里,我们提供了迄今为止对犬科和猫科动物肠道微生物组最全面的分析,纳入了 2639 份粪便鸟枪法宏基因组(2272 只狗和 367 只猫),涵盖了 14 个公开可用的数据集(n=730)和 8 个新的研究人群(n=1909)。这些数据与人类微生物组计划 1-2 期的 238 个和 112 个基线人类肠道宏基因组以及一个传统的马达加斯加人群的 112 个基线人类肠道宏基因组进行了比较,这些宏基因组的处理方式与动物宏基因组相同。所有的微生物组都采用基于参考的分类和功能分析进行了特征描述,以及从头组装,生成了聚类到种水平基因组-bin 的宏基因组组装基因组。与人类相比,伴侣动物共享了 184 个未在人类中发现的种水平基因组-bin,而这 198 个种水平基因组-bin在所有三个宿主中都有发现。我们应用了一种新的方法来区分这些共享生物的菌株,这些菌株要么是在宿主之间转移的,要么是宿主特有的,系统发育模式表明微生物谱系发生了宿主特异性适应。这与这些谱系通过宿主发生的功能分化相对应(例如,代谢和抗生素耐药基因的差异),这可能对伴侣动物的健康很重要。这项研究提供了迄今为止最大的伴侣动物肠道宏基因组资源,极大地促进了我们对“One Health”概念的理解,即人类和伴侣动物之间共享微生物环境,影响传染病、免疫反应和特定遗传因素。