Combined effects of host genetics and diet on human gut microbiota and incident disease in a single population cohort

Author:

Qin YouwenORCID,Havulinna Aki S.ORCID,Liu Yang,Jousilahti PekkaORCID,Ritchie Scott C.ORCID,Tokolyi AlexORCID,Sanders Jon G.ORCID,Valsta LiisaORCID,Brożyńska MartaORCID,Zhu QiyunORCID,Tripathi AnupriyaORCID,Vazquez-Baeza YoshikiORCID,Loomba RohitORCID,Cheng Susan,Jain MohitORCID,Niiranen TeemuORCID,Lahti LeoORCID,Knight Rob,Salomaa VeikkoORCID,Inouye MichaelORCID,Méric GuillaumeORCID

Abstract

AbstractCo-evolution between humans and the microbial communities colonizing them has resulted in an intimate assembly of thousands of microbial species mutualistically living on and in their body and impacting multiple aspects of host physiology and health. Several studies examining whether human genetic variation can affect gut microbiota suggest a complex combination of environmental and host factors. Here, we leverage a single large-scale population-based cohort of 5,959 genotyped individuals with matched gut microbial shotgun metagenomes, dietary information and health records up to 16 years post-sampling, to characterize human genetic variations associated with microbial abundances, and predict possible causal links with various diseases using Mendelian randomization (MR). Genome-wide association study (GWAS) identified 583 independent SNP-taxon associations at genome-wide significance (p<5.0×10-8), which included notable strong associations with LCT (p=5.02×10-35), ABO (p=1.1×10-12), and MED13L (p=1.84×10-12). A combination of genetics and dietary habits was shown to strongly shape the abundances of certain key bacterial members of the gut microbiota, and explain their genetic association. Genetic effects from the LCT locus on Bifidobacterium and three other associated taxa significantly differed according to dairy intake. Variation in mucin-degrading Faecalicatena lactaris abundances were associated with ABO, highlighting a preferential utilization of secreted A/B/AB-antigens as energy source in the gut, irrespectively of fibre intake. Enterococcus faecalis levels showed a robust association with a variant in MED13L, with putative links to colorectal cancer. Finally, we identified putative causal relationships between gut microbes and complex diseases using MR, with a predicted effect of Morganella on major depressive disorder that was consistent with observational incident disease analysis. Overall, we present striking examples of the intricate relationship between humans and their gut microbial communities, and highlight important health implications.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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