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Host variables confound gut microbiota studies of human disease.

Authors :
Vujkovic-Cvijin, Ivan
Vujkovic-Cvijin, Ivan
Sklar, Jack
Jiang, Lingjing
Natarajan, Loki
Knight, Rob
Belkaid, Yasmine
Vujkovic-Cvijin, Ivan
Vujkovic-Cvijin, Ivan
Sklar, Jack
Jiang, Lingjing
Natarajan, Loki
Knight, Rob
Belkaid, Yasmine
Source :
Nature; vol 587, iss 7834, 448-454; 0028-0836
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Low concordance between studies that examine the role of microbiota in human diseases is a pervasive challenge that limits the capacity to identify causal relationships between host-associated microorganisms and pathology. The risk of obtaining false positives is exacerbated by wide interindividual heterogeneity in microbiota composition1, probably due to population-wide differences in human lifestyle and physiological variables2 that exert differential effects on the microbiota. Here we infer the greatest, generalized sources of heterogeneity in human gut microbiota profiles and also identify human lifestyle and physiological characteristics that, if not evenly matched between cases and controls, confound microbiota analyses to produce spurious microbial associations with human diseases. We identify alcohol consumption frequency and bowel movement quality as unexpectedly strong sources of gut microbiota variance that differ in distribution between healthy participants and participants with a disease and that can confound study designs. We demonstrate that for numerous prevalent, high-burden human diseases, matching cases and controls for confounding variables reduces observed differences in the microbiota and the incidence of spurious associations. On this basis, we present a list of host variables that we recommend should be captured in human microbiota studies for the purpose of matching comparison groups, which we anticipate will increase robustness and reproducibility in resolving the members of the gut microbiota that are truly associated with human disease.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature; vol 587, iss 7834, 448-454; 0028-0836
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature vol 587, iss 7834, 448-454 0028-0836
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367465257
Document Type :
Electronic Resource