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American Gut: an Open Platform for Citizen Science Microbiome Research

Authors :
Daniel McDonald
Embriette Hyde
Justine W. Debelius
James T. Morton
Antonio Gonzalez
Gail Ackermann
Alexander A. Aksenov
Bahar Behsaz
Caitriona Brennan
Yingfeng Chen
Lindsay DeRight Goldasich
Pieter C. Dorrestein
Robert R. Dunn
Ashkaan K. Fahimipour
James Gaffney
Jack A. Gilbert
Grant Gogul
Jessica L. Green
Philip Hugenholtz
Greg Humphrey
Curtis Huttenhower
Matthew A. Jackson
Stefan Janssen
Dilip V. Jeste
Lingjing Jiang
Scott T. Kelley
Dan Knights
Tomasz Kosciolek
Joshua Ladau
Jeff Leach
Clarisse Marotz
Dmitry Meleshko
Alexey V. Melnik
Jessica L. Metcalf
Hosein Mohimani
Emmanuel Montassier
Jose Navas-Molina
Tanya T. Nguyen
Shyamal Peddada
Pavel Pevzner
Katherine S. Pollard
Gholamali Rahnavard
Adam Robbins-Pianka
Naseer Sangwan
Joshua Shorenstein
Larry Smarr
Se Jin Song
Timothy Spector
Austin D. Swafford
Varykina G. Thackray
Luke R. Thompson
Anupriya Tripathi
Yoshiki Vázquez-Baeza
Alison Vrbanac
Paul Wischmeyer
Elaine Wolfe
Qiyun Zhu
Rob Knight
Source :
mSystems, Vol 3, Iss 3 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2018.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Although much work has linked the human microbiome to specific phenotypes and lifestyle variables, data from different projects have been challenging to integrate and the extent of microbial and molecular diversity in human stool remains unknown. Using standardized protocols from the Earth Microbiome Project and sample contributions from over 10,000 citizen-scientists, together with an open research network, we compare human microbiome specimens primarily from the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia to one another and to environmental samples. Our results show an unexpected range of beta-diversity in human stool microbiomes compared to environmental samples; demonstrate the utility of procedures for removing the effects of overgrowth during room-temperature shipping for revealing phenotype correlations; uncover new molecules and kinds of molecular communities in the human stool metabolome; and examine emergent associations among the microbiome, metabolome, and the diversity of plants that are consumed (rather than relying on reductive categorical variables such as veganism, which have little or no explanatory power). We also demonstrate the utility of the living data resource and cross-cohort comparison to confirm existing associations between the microbiome and psychiatric illness and to reveal the extent of microbiome change within one individual during surgery, providing a paradigm for open microbiome research and education. IMPORTANCE We show that a citizen science, self-selected cohort shipping samples through the mail at room temperature recaptures many known microbiome results from clinically collected cohorts and reveals new ones. Of particular interest is integrating n = 1 study data with the population data, showing that the extent of microbiome change after events such as surgery can exceed differences between distinct environmental biomes, and the effect of diverse plants in the diet, which we confirm with untargeted metabolomics on hundreds of samples.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23795077
Volume :
3
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
mSystems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0301cbad620f4f3490bc93e225ec5d0c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00031-18