Sociobiome - Individual and neighborhood socioeconomic status influence the gut microbiome in a multi-ethnic population in the US

Author:

Ahn Jiyoung1,Kwak Soyoung2ORCID,Usyk Mykhaylo2,Beggs Dia3,Choi Heesun2,Ahdoot Dariush2,Wu Feng4,Maceda Lorraine2,Li Huilin2,Im Eun-Ok5,Han Hae-Ra6,Lee Eunjung7,Wu Anna7,Hayes Richard3

Affiliation:

1. NYU Langone Health

2. NYU Grossman School of Medicine

3. Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine

4. Perlmutter Cancer Center, NYU Langone Health

5. Emory University

6. Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing

7. University of Southern California

Abstract

Abstract Lower socioeconomic status (SES) is related to increased incidence and mortality due to chronic diseases in adults. Association between SES variables and gut microbiome variation has been observed in adults at the population level, suggesting that biological mechanisms may underlie the SES associations; however, there is a need for larger U.S. studies that consider individual- and neighborhood-level measures of SES in racially diverse populations. In 825 participants from a multi-ethnic cohort, we investigated how SES shapes the gut microbiome. We determined the relationship of a range of several individual- and neighborhood-level SES indicators with the gut microbiome. Individual education level and occupation were self-reported by questionnaire. Geocoding was applied to link participants’ addresses with neighborhood census tract socioeconomic indicators, including average income and social deprivation in the census tract. Gut microbiome was measured using 16SV4 region rRNA gene sequencing of stool samples. We compared α-diversity, β-diversity, and taxonomic and functional pathway abundance by socioeconomic status. Lower SES was significantly associated with greater α-diversity and compositional differences among groups, as measured by β-diversity. Several taxa related to low SES were identified, especially an increasing abundance of Genus Catenibacterium and Prevotella copri. The significant association between SES and gut microbiota remained even after considering the race/ethnicity in this racially diverse cohort. Together, these results showed that lower socioeconomic status was strongly associated with compositional and taxonomic measures of the gut microbiome, suggesting that SES may shape the gut microbiota.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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