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Transient colonizing microbes promote gut dysbiosis and functional impairment

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Abstract
Species composition of the healthy adult gut microbiota tends to be stable over time. Destabilization of the gut microbiome under the influence of different factors is the main driver of the microbial dysbiosis and subsequent impacts on host physiology. Here, we used metagenomics data from a Swedish longitudinal cohort, to determine the stability of the gut microbiome and uncovered two distinct microbial species groups; persistent colonizing species (PCS) and transient colonizing species (TCS). We validated the continuation of this grouping, generating gut metagenomics data for additional time points from the same Swedish cohort. We evaluated the existence of PCS/TCS across different geographical regions and observed they are globally conserved features. To characterize PCS/TCS phenotypes, we performed bioreactor fermentation with faecal samples and metabolic modeling. Finally, using chronic disease gut metagenome and other multi-omics data, we identified roles of TCS in microbial dysbiosis and link with abnormal changes to host physiology.
Author(s)
Lee SunjaeMeslier VictoriaBidkhori GholamrezaGarcia-Guevara FernandoEtienne-Mesmin LucieClasen FrederickPark JunseokPlaza Onate FlorianCai HaizhuangLe Chatelier EmmanuellePons NicolasPereira MarcelaSeifert MaikeBoulund FredrikEngstrand LarsLee DoheonProctor GordonMardinoglu AdilBlanquet-Diot StephanieMoyes DavidAlmeida MathieuEhrlich S. DuskoUhlen MathiasShoaie Saeed
Issued Date
2024-09
Type
Article
DOI
10.1038/s41522-024-00561-1
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/9368
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group | Nanyang Technological University
Citation
npj Biofilms and Microbiomes, v.10, no.1
ISSN
2055-5008
Appears in Collections:
Department of Life Sciences > 1. Journal Articles
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