Host genetic regulation of human gut microbial structural variation.
Daria V ZhernakovaDao-Ming WangLei LiuSergio Andreu-SánchezYue ZhangAngel Jonathan Ruiz-MorenoHaoran PengNiels PlompÁngela Del Castillo-IzquierdoRanko GacesaEsteban A Lopera-MayaGodfrey S TembaVesla I KullayaSander S van Leeuwennull nullRamnik J XavierQuirijn de MastLeo A B JoostenNiels P RiksenJoost H W RuttenMihai M NeteaSerena SannaCisca WijmengaRinse K WeersmaAlexandra ZhernakovaHermie J M HarmsenJingyuan FuPublished in: Nature (2024)
Although the impact of host genetics on gut microbial diversity and the abundance of specific taxa is well established 1-6 , little is known about how host genetics regulates the genetic diversity of gut microorganisms. Here we conducted a meta-analysis of associations between human genetic variation and gut microbial structural variation in 9,015 individuals from four Dutch cohorts. Strikingly, the presence rate of a structural variation segment in Faecalibacterium prausnitzii that harbours an N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) utilization gene cluster is higher in individuals who secrete the type A oligosaccharide antigen terminating in GalNAc, a feature that is jointly determined by human ABO and FUT2 genotypes, and we could replicate this association in a Tanzanian cohort. In vitro experiments demonstrated that GalNAc can be used as the sole carbohydrate source for F. prausnitzii strains that carry the GalNAc-metabolizing pathway. Further in silico and in vitro studies demonstrated that other ABO-associated species can also utilize GalNAc, particularly Collinsella aerofaciens. The GalNAc utilization genes are also associated with the host's cardiometabolic health, particularly in individuals with mucosal A-antigen. Together, the findings of our study demonstrate that genetic associations across the human genome and bacterial metagenome can provide functional insights into the reciprocal host-microbiome relationship.