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Article: Human Gut Microbiome Across Different Lifestyles: From Hunter-Gatherers to Urban Populations.

Rosas-Plaza, Santiago / Hernández-Terán, Alejandra / Navarro-Díaz, Marcelo / Escalante, Ana E / Morales-Espinosa, Rosario / Cerritos, René

Frontiers in microbiology

2022  Volume 13, Page(s) 843170

Abstract: Human lifestyle and its relationship with the human microbiome has been a line of research widely studied. This is because, throughout human history, civilizations have experienced different environments and lifestyles that could have promoted changes in ...

Abstract Human lifestyle and its relationship with the human microbiome has been a line of research widely studied. This is because, throughout human history, civilizations have experienced different environments and lifestyles that could have promoted changes in the human microbiome. The comparison between industrialized and non-industrialized human populations in several studies has allowed to observe variation in the microbiome structure due to the population lifestyle. Nevertheless, the lifestyle of human populations is a gradient where several subcategories can be described. Yet, it is not known how these different lifestyles of human populations affect the microbiome structure on a large scale. Therefore, the main goal of this work was the collection and comparison of 16S data from the gut microbiome of populations that have different lifestyles around the world. With the data obtained from 14 studies, it was possible to compare the gut microbiome of 568 individuals that represent populations of hunter-gatherers, agricultural, agropastoral, pastoral, and urban populations. Results showed that industrialized populations present less diversity than those from non-industrialized populations, as has been described before. However, by separating traditional populations into different categories, we were able to observe patterns that cannot be appreciated by encompassing the different traditional lifestyles in a single category. In this sense, we could confirm that different lifestyles exhibit distinct alpha and beta diversity. In particular, the gut microbiome of pastoral and agropastoral populations seems to be more similar to those of urban populations according to beta diversity analysis. Beyond that, beta diversity analyses revealed that bacterial composition reflects the different lifestyles, representing a transition from hunters-gatherers to industrialized populations. Also, we found that certain groups such as
Language English
Publishing date 2022-04-26
Publishing country Switzerland
Document type Journal Article
ZDB-ID 2587354-4
ISSN 1664-302X
ISSN 1664-302X
DOI 10.3389/fmicb.2022.843170
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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