Download PDF

Scientific Reports

Publication date: 2021-01-18
Volume: 11
Publisher: Nature Portfolio

Author:

Jacobson, David K
Honap, Tanvi P ; Ozga, Andrew T ; Meda, Nicolas ; Kagone, Therese S ; Carabin, Helene ; Spicer, Paul ; Tito, Raul Y ; Obregon-Tito, Alexandra J ; Reyes, Luis Marin ; Troncoso-Corzo, Luzmila ; Guija-Poma, Emilio ; Sankaranarayanan, Krithivasan ; Lewis, Cecil M

Keywords:

BACTERIA, DIET, DIVERSITY, MICROBIOTA, Multidisciplinary Sciences, Science & Technology, Science & Technology - Other Topics, Bacteria, Computational Biology, Developed Countries, Fatty Acids, Volatile, Feces, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Humans, Life Style, Metagenome, Phylogeny

Abstract:

High taxonomic diversity in non-industrial human gut microbiomes is often interpreted as beneficial; however, it is unclear if taxonomic diversity engenders ecological resilience (i.e. community stability and metabolic continuity). We estimate resilience through genus and species-level richness, phylogenetic diversity, and evenness in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production among a global gut metagenome panel of 12 populations (n = 451) representing industrial and non-industrial lifestyles, including novel metagenomic data from Burkina Faso (n = 90). We observe significantly higher genus-level resilience in non-industrial populations, while SCFA production in industrial populations is driven by a few phylogenetically closely related species (belonging to Bacteroides and Clostridium), meaning industrial microbiomes have low resilience potential. Additionally, database bias obfuscates resilience estimates, as we were 2-5 times more likely to identify SCFA-encoding species in industrial microbiomes compared to non-industrial. Overall, we find high phylogenetic diversity, richness, and evenness of bacteria encoding SCFAs in non-industrial gut microbiomes, signaling high potential for resilience in SCFA production, despite database biases that limit metagenomic analysis of non-industrial populations.