Login / Signup

Regional variation limits applications of healthy gut microbiome reference ranges and disease models.

Yan HeWei WuHui-Min ZhengPan LiDaniel McDonaldHua-Fang ShengMu-Xuan ChenZi-Hui ChenGui-Yuan JiZhong-Dai-Xi ZhengPrabhakar MujagondXiao-Jiao ChenZu-Hua RongPeng ChenLi-Yi LyuXian WangChong-Bin WuNan YuYan-Jun XuJia YinJeroen RaesRob KnightWen-Jun MaHong-Wei Zhou
Published in: Nature medicine (2018)
Dysbiosis, departure of the gut microbiome from a healthy state, has been suggested to be a powerful biomarker of disease incidence and progression1-3. Diagnostic applications have been proposed for inflammatory bowel disease diagnosis and prognosis4, colorectal cancer prescreening5 and therapeutic choices in melanoma6. Noninvasive sampling could facilitate large-scale public health applications, including early diagnosis and risk assessment in metabolic7 and cardiovascular diseases8. To understand the generalizability of microbiota-based diagnostic models of metabolic disease, we characterized the gut microbiota of 7,009 individuals from 14 districts within 1 province in China. Among phenotypes, host location showed the strongest associations with microbiota variations. Microbiota-based metabolic disease models developed in one location failed when used elsewhere, suggesting that such models cannot be extrapolated. Interpolated models performed much better, especially in diseases with obvious microbiota-related characteristics. Interpolation efficiency decreased as geographic scale increased, indicating a need to build localized baseline and disease models to predict metabolic risks.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • risk assessment
  • cardiovascular disease
  • type diabetes
  • south africa
  • risk factors
  • heavy metals
  • basal cell carcinoma