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The monkey microbial biobank brings previously uncultivated bioresources for nonhuman primate and human gut microbiomes.

Danhua LiChang LiuRexiding AbuduainiMengxuan DuYujing WangHaizhen ZhuHonghe ChenNan ZhouYuhua XinLinhuan WuJuncai MaYuguang ZhouYong LuChengying JiangQiang SunShuang-Jiang Liu
Published in: mLife (2022)
Nonhuman primates (NHPs) such as monkeys are the closest living relatives to humans and are the best available models for causative studies of human health and diseases. Gut microbiomes are intensively involved in host health. In this study, by large-scale cultivation of microbes from fecal samples of monkeys, we obtained previously uncultured bacterial species and constructed a Macaca fascicularis Gut Microbial Biobank (MfGMB). The MfGMB consisted of 250 strains that represent 97 species of 63 genera, 25 families, and 4 phyla. The information of the 250 strains and the genomes of 97 cultured species are publicly accessible. The MfGMB represented nearly 50% of core gut microbial compositions at the genus level and covered over 80% of the KO-based known gut microbiome functions of M. fascicularis . Data mining showed that the bacterial species in the MfGMB were prevalent not only in NHPs gut microbiomes but also in human gut microbiomes. This study will help the understanding and future investigations on how gut microbiomes interact with their mammalian hosts.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • human health
  • microbial community
  • escherichia coli
  • risk assessment
  • public health
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • genetic diversity
  • wastewater treatment
  • health information
  • climate change