Structure, function and diversity of the healthy human microbiome

Curtis Huttenhower(Broad Institute), J. Fah Sathirapongsasuti(Broad Institute), Nicola Segata(Howard Hughes Medical Institute),  Curtis Huttenhower(Broad Institute), Niall J. Lennon(Broad Institute), Theresa A. Hepburn(Broad Institute), Allison Griggs(Broad Institute), Doyle V. Ward(Broad Institute), Chandri Yandava(Broad Institute), Dennis C. Friedrich(Broad Institute), Sheila Fisher(Broad Institute), Margaret Priest(Broad Institute), Narmada Shenoy(Broad Institute), Cristyn Kells(Broad Institute), Diana Tabbaa(Broad Institute), Curtis Huttenhower(Broad Institute), Eric J. Alm(Broad Institute), Dirk Gevers(Broad Institute), Ashlee M. Earl(Broad Institute), Jonathan M. Goldberg(Broad Institute), Brian J. Haas(Broad Institute), Sharvari Gujja(Broad Institute), Susan J. Birren(Broad Institute), Harindra Arachchi(Broad Institute), M.A. Pearson(Broad Institute), Jeremy Zucker(Broad Institute), Teena Mehta(Broad Institute), Michael Feldgarden(Broad Institute), Dawn Ciulla(Broad Institute), Lucia Alvarado(Broad Institute), Chad Nusbaum(Broad Institute), Sean M. Sykes(Broad Institute), Sarah Young(Broad Institute), Scott Anderson(Broad Institute), Michael G. FitzGerald(Broad Institute), Clinton Howarth(Broad Institute), Katherine Huang(Broad Institute), Toby Bloom(Broad Institute), Rachel Erlich(Broad Institute), Carsten Russ(Broad Institute), Qiandong Zeng(Broad Institute), Georgia Giannoukos(Broad Institute), Catherine Lozupone(University of Colorado Boulder), Rob Knight(Broad Institute), José C. Clemente(National Institutes of Health), Daniel McDonald(Virginia Commonwealth University), Rob Knight(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Hongyu Gao(Baylor College of Medicine), Elizabeth A. Lobos(J. Craig Venter Institute), Brandi Herter(National Institutes of Health), Sahar Abubucker(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Vincent Magrini(University of Maryland, Baltimore), George M. Weinstock(United States Department of Energy), Todd Wylie(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Lucinda Fulton(Washington University in St. Louis), Lei Chen(National Institutes of Health), Ye Liang(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Yanjiao Zhou(Broad Institute), Sandra W. Clifton(University of Colorado Boulder), Kimberley D. Delehaunty(Washington University in St. Louis), Veena Bhonagiri(National Institutes of Health), Chad Tomlinson(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Elaine R. Mardis(National Institutes of Health), John Martin(University of Maryland, Baltimore),  Michelle O’Laughlin(Washington University in St. Louis), David J. Dooling(Washington University in St. Louis), Aye Wollam(National Institutes of Health), Kristine M. Wylie(Washington University in St. Louis), Candace N. Farmer(Washington University in St. Louis), Kathie A. Mihindukulasuriya(Washington University in St. Louis), Wesley C. Warren(Baylor College of Medicine), Robert S. Fulton(Washington University in St. Louis), Makedonka Mitreva(Baylor College of Medicine), Zhengyuan Wang(Washington University in St. Louis), Jason Walker(J. Craig Venter Institute), Richard K. Wilson(Washington University in St. Louis), Karthik Kota(Broad Institute), Craig Pohl(Washington University in St. Louis), Catrina C. Fronick(Cleveland Clinic), Erica Sodergren(Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Patrick Minx(Broad Institute), Kymberlie Hallsworth-Pepin(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Asif Chinwalla(Broad Institute), Elizabeth L. Appelbaum(University of North Carolina at Charlotte), Leslie Foster(J. Craig Venter Institute),  Yu-Hui Rogers(J. Craig Venter Institute), Ravi Sanka(National Institutes of Health), Johannes B. Goll(J. Craig Venter Institute), Kelvin Li(Broad Institute), Jamison McCorrison(J. Craig Venter Institute), A. Scott Durkin(J. Craig Venter Institute), Jason Miller(J. Craig Venter Institute), Barbara A. Methé(J. Craig Venter Institute), Indresh Singh(Broad Institute), Mathangi Thiagarajan(National Institutes of Health), Manolito Torralba(National Institutes of Health),  Karen E. Nelson(Broad Institute), Dana Busam(J. Craig Venter Institute), Jonathan H. Badger(J. Craig Venter Institute), Granger G. Sutton(Broad Institute), Ramana Madupu(Broad Institute), Monika Bihan(J. Craig Venter Institute), Catherine Jordan(Broad Institute), Anup Mahurkar(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Michelle Giglio(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Cesar Arze(Broad Institute), Jonathan Crabtree(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Jacques Ravel(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Heather H. Creasy(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Joshua Orvis(Broad Institute), Brandi L. Cantarel(Broad Institute), Owen White(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Lynn M. Schriml(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Jennifer R. Wortman(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Victor Felix(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Noam J. Davidovics(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Olukemi O. Abolude(University of Maryland, Baltimore), James R. White(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Michael Holder(Baylor College of Medicine), Lan Zhang(Baylor College of Medicine), Lora Lewis(Broad Institute), Yue Liu(Baylor College of Medicine), Jeffrey G. Reid(Baylor College of Medicine), Christian Buhay(National Institutes of Health), Irene Newsham(Baylor College of Medicine), Katarzyna Wilczek-Boney(Baylor College of Medicine), Christie Kovar(Baylor College of Medicine),  Sarah K. Highlander (Baylor College of Medicine), Kim C. Worley(United States Department of Energy), Yan Ding(Baylor College of Medicine), Sandra L. Lee(Baylor College of Medicine), Yuanqing Wu(Baylor College of Medicine), Xiang Qin(Broad Institute), Huaiyang Jiang(Baylor College of Medicine), Yiming Zhu(Baylor College of Medicine), Donna M. Muzny(Baylor College of Medicine),  Joseph F. Petrosino(J. Craig Venter Institute), Richard A. Gibbs(United States Department of Energy), Shannon Dugan(Baylor College of Medicine), Vandita Joshi(Baylor College of Medicine), James Versalovic(Los Alamos National Laboratory), James Versalovic(Baylor College of Medicine), Kjersti M. Aagaard(National Institutes of Health), Emma Allen‐Vercoe(Washington University in St. Louis), Eric J. Alm(Broad Institute), Gary L. Andersen(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Gary C. Armitage(University of California, San Francisco), Bonnie P. Youmans(United States Department of Energy), Wendy A. Keitel(United States Department of Energy), Tulin Ayvaz(J. Craig Venter Institute),  Sarah K. Highlander (Baylor College of Medicine),  Joseph F. Petrosino(National Institutes of Health), Matthew C. Ross(Baylor College of Medicine), Carl C. Baker(National Institutes of Health), Lisa Begg(Broad Institute), Valentina Di Francesco(National Institutes of Health),  Joseph L. Campbell(National Institutes of Health), Tsegahiwot Belachew(National Institutes of Health), Maria Y. Giovanni(National Institutes of Health), Christina Giblin(Broad Institute), Carolyn Deal(National Institutes of Health), Martin J. Blaser(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Jane Peterson(National Institutes of Health), Jean E. McEwen(National Institutes of Health), Vivien Bonazzi(National Institutes of Health), Lu Wang(Broad Institute), Shaila Chhibba(National Institutes of Health),  Joseph L. Campbell(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Kris A. Wetterstrand(National Institutes of Health), Lita M. Proctor(National Institutes of Health), Jeffery A. Schloss(National Institutes of Health),  Christopher Wellington (Broad Institute), J. Paul Brooks(National Institutes of Health), J. Paul Brooks(Baylor College of Medicine),  Gregory A. Buck(Vrije Universiteit Brussel),  Maria C. Rivera (University of Maryland, Baltimore), Nihar U. Sheth(Baylor College of Medicine),  Maria C. Rivera(Virginia Commonwealth University), Gregory A. Buck (Virginia Commonwealth University), Shane R. Canon(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory),  Chien-Chi Lo (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Patrick Chain(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Matthew Scholz(J. Craig Venter Institute), Konstantinos Mavromatis(Baylor College of Medicine), Konstantinos Liolios(Broad Institute), Victor Markowitz(J. Craig Venter Institute), Ioanna Pagani(Joint Genome Institute), Patrick Chain(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Nikos C. Kyrpides(National Institutes of Health), I-Min A. Chen(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Krishna Palaniappan(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Victor Markowitz(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Ken Chu(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Mary A. Cutting(University of Michigan), R. Dwayne Lunsford(Harvard University Press), Emily Harris(National Institutes of Health), Pamela McInnes(Washington University in St. Louis), Holli Hamilton(Cleveland Clinic), Catherine Davis(University of California, San Francisco), Todd Z. DeSantis(Broad Institute), Floyd E. Dewhirst(Harvard University), Katherine P. Lemon(Boston Children's Hospital), Jacques Izard(J. Craig Venter Institute), Floyd E. Dewhirst(Harvard University), Jacques Izard(Harvard University), Patricio S. La Rosa(Washington University in St. Louis), William D. Shannon(Washington University in St. Louis), Elena Deych(J. Craig Venter Institute), W. Michael Dunne(Broad Institute), Mark A. Watson(Broad Institute), W. Michael Dunne(J. Craig Venter Institute), R. C. Edgar(Washington University in St. Louis), Richard R. Sharp(J. Craig Venter Institute), Ruth M. Farrell(Cleveland Clinic), Karoline Faust (Vrije Universiteit Brussel),  Jeroen Raes(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Karoline Faust (Vrije Universiteit Brussel),  Jeroen Raes(National Institutes of Health), Anthony A. Fodor(University of North Carolina at Charlotte), Larry J. Forney(Broad Institute), Jonathan Friedman(Washington University in St. Louis), Christopher S. Smillie(Washington University in St. Louis), Nathalia Garcia(National Institutes of Health), Antonio González(National Institutes of Health), Dan Knights(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Susan Kinder Haake(Baylor College of Medicine), Diane E. Hoffmann(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Susan M. Huse(Marine Biological Laboratory), Janet Jansson(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), James A. Katancik(Broad Institute), Beltran Rodriguez-Mueller(Washington University in St. Louis), Scott T. Kelley(San Diego State University), Nicholas B. King(J. Craig Venter Institute), Heidi H. Kong(Baylor College of Medicine), Omry Koren(Baylor College of Medicine), Ruth E. Ley(Washington University in St. Louis), Sergey Koren(Baylor College of Medicine),  Daniel D. Sommer(Northwestern University), Mihai Pop(Broad Institute), Bo Liu(Broad Institute), Katherine P. Lemon(Boston Children's Hospital), Paul Spicer(Baylor College of Medicine), Cecil M. Lewis(J. Craig Venter Institute), Tessa Madden(J. Craig Venter Institute), Peter Mannon(Baylor College of Medicine), Amy L. McGuire(Baylor College of Medicine), Shital M. Patel(Baylor College of Medicine), Tatiana A. Vishnivetskaya(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Mircea Podar(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Thomas J. Sharpton(Gladstone Institutes), Rebecca Truty(Gladstone Institutes), Katherine S. Pollard(Gladstone Institutes), Katherine S. Pollard(Gladstone Institutes), Katherine S. Pollard(Gladstone Institutes), Mihai Pop(University of Maryland, College Park), Mina Rho(Indiana University Bloomington), Yuzhen Ye(Indiana University Bloomington), Rosamond Rhodes(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Kevin Riehle(Baylor College of Medicine), Pamela Sankar(University of Pennsylvania), Alyxandria M. Schubert(University of Michigan), Patrick D. Schloss(University of Michigan), Thomas M. Schmidt(Michigan State University), Gina Simone(Emmes (United States)), Jack D. Sobel(Harper University Hospital), Todd J. Treangen(Johns Hopkins University), Shibu Yooseph(J. Craig Venter Institute), Laurie Zoloth(Northwestern University), Joseph F. Petrosino(Baylor College of Medicine), Julia A. Segre(National Human Genome Research Institute), Sean Conlan(National Human Genome Research Institute)
Nature
June 1, 2012
Cited by 11,880Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Studies of the human microbiome have revealed that even healthy individuals differ remarkably in the microbes that occupy habitats such as the gut, skin and vagina. Much of this diversity remains unexplained, although diet, environment, host genetics and early microbial exposure have all been implicated. Accordingly, to characterize the ecology of human-associated microbial communities, the Human Microbiome Project has analysed the largest cohort and set of distinct, clinically relevant body habitats so far. We found the diversity and abundance of each habitat’s signature microbes to vary widely even among healthy subjects, with strong niche specialization both within and among individuals. The project encountered an estimated 81–99% of the genera, enzyme families and community configurations occupied by the healthy Western microbiome. Metagenomic carriage of metabolic pathways was stable among individuals despite variation in community structure, and ethnic/racial background proved to be one of the strongest associations of both pathways and microbes with clinical metadata. These results thus delineate the range of structural and functional configurations normal in the microbial communities of a healthy population, enabling future characterization of the epidemiology, ecology and translational applications of the human microbiome. The Human Microbiome Project Consortium reports the first results of their analysis of microbial communities from distinct, clinically relevant body habitats in a human cohort; the insights into the microbial communities of a healthy population lay foundations for future exploration of the epidemiology, ecology and translational applications of the human microbiome. The Human Microbiome Project (HMP), supported by the National Institutes of Health Common Fund, has the goal of characterizing the microbial communities that inhabit and interact with the human body in sickness and in health. In two Articles in this issue of Nature, the HMP Consortium presents the first population-scale details of the organismal and functional composition of the microbiota across five areas of the body. An associated News & Views discusses the initial results — which, along with those of a series of co-publications, already constitute the most extensive catalogue of organisms and genes related to the human microbiome yet published — and highlights some of the major questions that the project will tackle in the next few years.


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