Longitudinal profiling of the microbiome at four body sites reveals core stability and individualized dynamics during health and disease

  • Xin Zhou
  • , Xiaotao Shen
  • , Jethro S. Johnson
  • , Daniel J. Spakowicz
  • , Melissa Agnello
  • , Wenyu Zhou
  • , Monica Avina
  • , Alexander Honkala
  • , Faye Chleilat
  • , Shirley Jingyi Chen
  • , Kexin Cha
  • , Shana Leopold
  • , Chenchen Zhu
  • , Lei Chen
  • , Lin Lyu
  • , Daniel Hornburg
  • , Si Wu
  • , Xinyue Zhang
  • , Chao Jiang
  • , Liuyiqi Jiang
  • Lihua Jiang, Ruiqi Jian, Andrew W. Brooks, Meng Wang, Kévin Contrepois, Peng Gao, Sophia Miryam Schüssler Fiorenza Rose, Thi Dong Binh Tran, Hoan Nguyen, Alessandra Celli, Bo Young Hong, Eddy J. Bautista, Yair Dorsett, Paula B. Kavathas, Yanjiao Zhou, Erica Sodergren, George M. Weinstock, Michael P. Snyder

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

To understand the dynamic interplay between the human microbiome and host during health and disease, we analyzed the microbial composition, temporal dynamics, and associations with host multi-omics, immune, and clinical markers of microbiomes from four body sites in 86 participants over 6 years. We found that microbiome stability and individuality are body-site specific and heavily influenced by the host. The stool and oral microbiome are more stable than the skin and nasal microbiomes, possibly due to their interaction with the host and environment. We identify individual-specific and commonly shared bacterial taxa, with individualized taxa showing greater stability. Interestingly, microbiome dynamics correlate across body sites, suggesting systemic dynamics influenced by host-microbial-environment interactions. Notably, insulin-resistant individuals show altered microbial stability and associations among microbiome, molecular markers, and clinical features, suggesting their disrupted interaction in metabolic disease. Our study offers comprehensive views of multi-site microbial dynamics and their relationship with host health and disease.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)506-526.e9
JournalCell Host and Microbe
Volume32
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 10 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Parasitology
  • Microbiology
  • Virology

Keywords

  • insulin resistance
  • longitudinal profiling
  • microbiome host interaction
  • microbiome stability
  • nasal microbiome
  • oral microbiome
  • precision medicine
  • prediabetes
  • skin microbiome
  • stool microbiome

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