AI Article Synopsis

  • Gut microbiota from rural, non-industrialized societies in Tanzania and Botswana show significant differences compared to urban populations from Philadelphia, especially in bacterial diversity and composition.
  • Tanzanian populations exhibit higher individual bacterial diversity and lower dissimilarity compared to Botswanan groups, with distinct gut bacteria profiles observed among hunter-gatherers versus agropastoralists and pastoralists.
  • Both geographic proximity and genetic relatedness influence gut bacterial compositions, with a notable correlation seen between individuals’ gut bacteria and their genetic ties within certain African populations.

Article Abstract

Background: Gut microbiota from individuals in rural, non-industrialized societies differ from those in individuals from industrialized societies. Here, we use 16S rRNA sequencing to survey the gut bacteria of seven non-industrialized populations from Tanzania and Botswana. These include populations practicing traditional hunter-gatherer, pastoralist, and agropastoralist subsistence lifestyles and a comparative urban cohort from the greater Philadelphia region.

Results: We find that bacterial diversity per individual and within-population phylogenetic dissimilarity differs between Botswanan and Tanzanian populations, with Tanzania generally having higher diversity per individual and lower dissimilarity between individuals. Among subsistence groups, the gut bacteria of hunter-gatherers are phylogenetically distinct from both agropastoralists and pastoralists, but that of agropastoralists and pastoralists were not significantly different from each other. Nearly half of the Bantu-speaking agropastoralists from Botswana have gut bacteria that are very similar to the Philadelphian cohort. Based on imputed metagenomic content, US samples have a relative enrichment of genes found in pathways for degradation of several common industrial pollutants. Within two African populations, we find evidence that bacterial composition correlates with the genetic relatedness between individuals.

Conclusions: Across the cohort, similarity in bacterial presence/absence compositions between people increases with both geographic proximity and genetic relatedness, while abundance weighted bacterial composition varies more significantly with geographic proximity than with genetic relatedness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6341659PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-018-1616-9DOI Listing

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