Subsistence strategies in traditional societies distinguish gut microbiomes

Alexandra J. Obregón-Tito(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Raúl Y. Tito(Universidad Científica del Sur), Jessica L. Metcalf(University of Colorado Boulder), Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan(University of Oklahoma), José C. Clemente(University of Colorado Boulder), Luke K. Ursell(University of Colorado Boulder), Zhenjiang Zech Xu(University of Colorado Boulder), Will Van Treuren(University of Colorado Boulder), Rob Knight(University of California San Diego), Patrick M. Gaffney(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Paul Spicer(University of Oklahoma), Paul A. Lawson(University of Oklahoma), Luis Marin-Reyes(Instituto Nacional de Salud), Omar Trujillo(Instituto Nacional de Salud), Morris W. Foster(Old Dominion University), Emilio Guija-Poma(Universidad Científica del Sur), Luzmila Troncoso-Corzo(Universidad Científica del Sur), Christina Warinner(University of Oklahoma), Andrew T. Ozga(University of Oklahoma), Cecil M. Lewis(University of Oklahoma)
Nature Communications
March 25, 2015
Cited by 589Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Recent studies suggest that gut microbiomes of urban-industrialized societies are different from those of traditional peoples. Here we examine the relationship between lifeways and gut microbiota through taxonomic and functional potential characterization of faecal samples from hunter-gatherer and traditional agriculturalist communities in Peru and an urban-industrialized community from the US. We find that in addition to taxonomic and metabolic differences between urban and traditional lifestyles, hunter-gatherers form a distinct sub-group among traditional peoples. As observed in previous studies, we find that Treponema are characteristic of traditional gut microbiomes. Moreover, through genome reconstruction (2.2-2.5 MB, coverage depth × 26-513) and functional potential characterization, we discover these Treponema are diverse, fall outside of pathogenic clades and are similar to Treponema succinifaciens, a known carbohydrate metabolizer in swine. Gut Treponema are found in non-human primates and all traditional peoples studied to date, suggesting they are symbionts lost in urban-industrialized societies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis