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  4. A comprehensive assessment of demographic, environmental, and host genetic associations with gut microbiome diversity in healthy individuals
 
research article

A comprehensive assessment of demographic, environmental, and host genetic associations with gut microbiome diversity in healthy individuals

Scepanovic, Petar  
•
Hodel, Flavia  
•
Mondot, Stanislas
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September 13, 2019
Microbiome

Background The gut microbiome is an important determinant of human health. Its composition has been shown to be influenced by multiple environmental factors and likely by host genetic variation. In the framework of the Milieu Interieur Consortium, a total of 1000 healthy individuals of western European ancestry, with a 1:1 sex ratio and evenly stratified across five decades of life (age 20-69), were recruited. We generated 16S ribosomal RNA profiles from stool samples for 858 participants. We investigated genetic and non-genetic factors that contribute to individual differences in fecal microbiome composition. Results Among 110 demographic, clinical, and environmental factors, 11 were identified as significantly correlated with alpha-diversity, ss-diversity, or abundance of specific microbial communities in multivariable models. Age and blood alanine aminotransferase levels showed the strongest associations with microbiome diversity. In total, all non-genetic factors explained 16.4% of the variance. We then searched for associations between > 5 million single nucleotide polymorphisms and the same indicators of fecal microbiome diversity, including the significant non-genetic factors as covariates. No genome-wide significant associations were identified after correction for multiple testing. A small fraction of previously reported associations between human genetic variants and specific taxa could be replicated in our cohort, while no replication was observed for any of the diversity metrics. Conclusion In a well-characterized cohort of healthy individuals, we identified several non-genetic variables associated with fecal microbiome diversity. In contrast, host genetics only had a negligible influence. Demographic and environmental factors are thus the main contributors to fecal microbiome composition in healthy individuals.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s40168-019-0747-x
Web of Science ID

WOS:000485904800001

Author(s)
Scepanovic, Petar  
Hodel, Flavia  
Mondot, Stanislas
Partula, Valentin
Byrd, Allyson
Hammer, Christian  
Alanio, Cecile
Bergstedt, Jacob
Patin, Etienne
Touvier, Mathilde
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Date Issued

2019-09-13

Published in
Microbiome
Volume

7

Issue

1

Start page

130

Subjects

Microbiology

•

Microbiology

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microbiome

•

gut

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human

•

genomics

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16s rrna gene sequencing

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gwas

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healthy

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demographics

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environment

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population-structure

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milieu-interieur

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genome

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extraction

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imputation

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inference

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dynamics

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dna

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPFELLAY  
Available on Infoscience
October 1, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/161732
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