Expanding the human gut microbiome atlas of Africa.
Dylan G MaghiniOvokeraye H OduaranJakob WirbelLuicer A Ingasia OlubayoNatalie SmythTheophilous MathemaCarl W BelgerGodfred AgongoPalwendé R BouaSolomon Sr ChomaF Xavier Gómez-OlivéIsaac KisianganiGiven R MashabaLisa MicklesfieldShukri F MohamedEngelbert A NonterahShane NorrisHermann SorghoStephen TollmanFloidy WafawanakaFurahini TluwayMichèle RamsayAmi Siddharth BhattScott HazelhurstPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Population studies are crucial in understanding the complex interplay between the gut microbiome and geographical, lifestyle, genetic, and environmental factors. However, populations from low- and middle-income countries, which represent ~84% of the world population, have been excluded from large-scale gut microbiome research. Here, we present the AWI-Gen 2 Microbiome Project, a cross-sectional gut microbiome study sampling 1,803 women from Burkina Faso, Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa. By intensively engaging with communities that range from rural and horticultural to urban informal settlements and post-industrial, we capture population diversity that represents a far greater breadth of the world's population. Using shotgun metagenomic sequencing, we find that study site explains substantially more microbial variation than disease status. We identify taxa with strong geographic and lifestyle associations, including loss of Treponema and Cryptobacteroides species and gain of Bifidobacterium species in urban populations. We uncover a wealth of prokaryotic and viral novelty, including 1,005 new bacterial metagenome-assembled genomes, and identify phylogeography signatures in Treponema succinifaciens . Finally, we find a microbiome signature of HIV infection that is defined by several taxa not previously associated with HIV, including Dysosmobacter welbionis and Enterocloster sp . This study represents the largest population-representative survey of gut metagenomes of African individuals to date, and paired with extensive clinical biomarkers, demographic data, and lifestyle information, provides extensive opportunity for microbiome-related discovery and research.
Keyphrases
- south africa
- cardiovascular disease
- metabolic syndrome
- physical activity
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- adipose tissue
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- risk assessment
- dna methylation
- microbial community
- big data
- social media
- wastewater treatment
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- high throughput
- men who have sex with men
- skeletal muscle
- induced pluripotent stem cells