Ethnicity-Influenced Microbiota: A Future Healthcare Perspective
Autor: | Madhusmita Dehingia, Mojibur R. Khan, Atanu Adak |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Microbiology (medical)
Computer and Information Sciences Epidemiology Ethnic group Microbial Genomics Biology Gut flora digestive system Microbiology Ethnic Epidemiology 03 medical and health sciences fluids and secretions Human gut Virology Health care Ethnicity Genetics Medicine and Health Sciences Humans Ethnicities Hispanic People Data Management 030304 developmental biology Evolutionary Biology Metadata 0303 health sciences Bacteria Population Biology 030306 microbiology business.industry Microbiota Gut Bacteria Perspective (graphical) Organisms Biology and Life Sciences Human Genetics Genomics biology.organism_classification United States Gastrointestinal Microbiome Infectious Diseases Medical Microbiology Evolutionary biology People and Places Population Groupings Microbiome business Population Genetics Research Article |
Zdroj: | PLoS Biology |
ISSN: | 0966-842X |
Popis: | Composed of hundreds of microbial species, the composition of the human gut microbiota can vary with chronic diseases underlying health disparities that disproportionally affect ethnic minorities. However, the influence of ethnicity on the gut microbiota remains largely unexplored and lacks reproducible generalizations across studies. By distilling associations between ethnicity and differences in two US-based 16S gut microbiota data sets including 1,673 individuals, we report 12 microbial genera and families that reproducibly vary by ethnicity. Interestingly, a majority of these microbial taxa, including the most heritable bacterial family, Christensenellaceae, overlap with genetically associated taxa and form co-occurring clusters linked by similar fermentative and methanogenic metabolic processes. These results demonstrate recurrent associations between specific taxa in the gut microbiota and ethnicity, providing hypotheses for examining specific members of the gut microbiota as mediators of health disparities. Author summary Understanding microbiota similarities and differences across ethnicities has the potential to advance approaches aimed at personalized microbial discovery and treatment, particularly those involved in ethnic health disparities. Here, we explore whether or not self-declared ethnicity consistently varies with gut microbiota composition across 1,673 healthy individuals in the United States. We find subtle but significant differences in taxonomic composition between four ethnicities, and we replicate these results across two study populations. Within the gut microbiota of Americans, there are at least 12 microbial taxa, which reproducibly vary in abundance across ethnicities. These taxa tend to correlate in abundance and metabolic functions and overlap with previously identified taxa that are associated with human genetic variation. We discuss the roles these taxa play in digestion and disease and propose hypotheses for how they may relate to ethnic health disparities. This study highlights the need to consider and potentially account for ethnic diversity in microbiota research and therapeutics. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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