Human microbiome variation associated with race and ethnicity emerges as early as 3 months of age

Author:

Mallott Elizabeth K.ORCID,Sitarik Alexandra R.,Leve Leslie D.,Cioffi Camille,Camargo Carlos A.,Hasegawa Kohei,Bordenstein Seth R.ORCID

Abstract

Human microbiome variation is linked to the incidence, prevalence, and mortality of many diseases and associates with race and ethnicity in the United States. However, the age at which microbiome variability emerges between these groups remains a central gap in knowledge. Here, we identify that gut microbiome variation associated with race and ethnicity arises after 3 months of age and persists through childhood. One-third of the bacterial taxa that vary across caregiver-identified racial categories in children are taxa reported to also vary between adults. Machine learning modeling of childhood microbiomes from 8 cohort studies (2,756 samples from 729 children) distinguishes racial and ethnic categories with 87% accuracy. Importantly, predictive genera are also among the top 30 most important taxa when childhood microbiomes are used to predict adult self-identified race and ethnicity. Our results highlight a critical developmental window at or shortly after 3 months of age when social and environmental factors drive race and ethnicity-associated microbiome variation and may contribute to adult health and health disparities.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

NIH Office of the Director

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute on Drug Abuse

College of Education, University of Oregon

Vanderbilt Microbiome Innovation Center

Huck Institutes at The Pennsylvania State University

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience

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