Back to Search Start Over

Universal gut microbial relationships in the gut microbiome of wild baboons.

Authors :
Roche KE
Bjork JR
Dasari MR
Grieneisen L
Jansen D
Gould TJ
Gesquiere LR
Barreiro LB
Alberts SC
Blekhman R
Gilbert JA
Tung J
Mukherjee S
Archie EA
Source :
ELife [Elife] 2023 May 09; Vol. 12. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 09.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Ecological relationships between bacteria mediate the services that gut microbiomes provide to their hosts. Knowing the overall direction and strength of these relationships is essential to learn how ecology scales up to affect microbiome assembly, dynamics, and host health. However, whether bacterial relationships are generalizable across hosts or personalized to individual hosts is debated. Here, we apply a robust, multinomial logistic-normal modeling framework to extensive time series data (5534 samples from 56 baboon hosts over 13 years) to infer thousands of correlations in bacterial abundance in individual baboons and test the degree to which bacterial abundance correlations are 'universal'. We also compare these patterns to two human data sets. We find that, most bacterial correlations are weak, negative, and universal across hosts, such that shared correlation patterns dominate over host-specific correlations by almost twofold. Further, taxon pairs that had inconsistent correlation signs (either positive or negative) in different hosts always had weak correlations within hosts. From the host perspective, host pairs with the most similar bacterial correlation patterns also had similar microbiome taxonomic compositions and tended to be genetic relatives. Compared to humans, universality in baboons was similar to that in human infants, and stronger than one data set from human adults. Bacterial families that showed universal correlations in human infants were often universal in baboons. Together, our work contributes new tools for analyzing the universality of bacterial associations across hosts, with implications for microbiome personalization, community assembly, and stability, and for designing microbiome interventions to improve host health.<br />Competing Interests: KR, JB, MD, LG, DJ, TG, LG, LB, SA, RB, JG, SM, EA No competing interests declared, JT Reviewing editor, eLife<br /> (© 2023, Roche et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050-084X
Volume :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ELife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37158607
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83152