Author:
Brito Ilana L.,Gurry Thomas,Zhao Shijie,Huang Katherine,Young Sarah K.,Shea Terrence P.,Naisilisili Waisea,Jenkins Aaron P.,Jupiter Stacy D.,Gevers Dirk,Alm Eric J.
Abstract
AbstractThe human microbiome, described as an accessory organ because of the crucial functions it provides, is composed of species that are uniquely found in humans1,2. Yet, surprisingly little is known about the impact of routine interpersonal contacts in shaping microbiome composition. In a relatively ‘closed’ cohort of 287 people from the Fiji Islands, where common barriers to bacterial transmission are absent, we examine putative bacterial transmission in individuals’ gut and oral microbiomes using strain-level data from both core SNPs and flexible genomic regions. We find a weak signal of transmission, defined by the inferred sharing of genotypes, across many organisms that, in aggregate, reveals strong transmission patterns, most notably within households and between spouses. We find that women harbor strains more closely related to those harbored by their familial and social contacts than men; and that transmission patterns of oral- and gut-associated microbiota need not be the same. Using strain-level data alone, we are able to confidently predict a subset of spouses, highlighting the role of shared susceptibilities, behaviors or social interactions that distinguish specific links in the social network.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
5 articles.
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