Extensive Unexplored Human Microbiome Diversity Revealed by Over 150,000 Genomes from Metagenomes Spanning Age, Geography, and Lifestyle
Author(s) -
Edoardo Pasolli,
Francesco Asnicar,
Serena Manara,
Moreno Zolfo,
Nicolai Karcher,
Federica Armanini,
Francesco Beghini,
Paolo Manghi,
Adrian Tett,
Paolo Ghensi,
María Carmen Collado,
Benjamin L. Rice,
Casey DuLong,
Xochitl C. Morgan,
Christopher D. Golden,
Christopher Quince,
Curtis Huttenhower,
Nicola Segata
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.01.001
Subject(s) - biology , microbiome , diversity (politics) , human microbiome , metagenomics , evolutionary biology , genome , computational biology , genetics , gene , anthropology , sociology
The body-wide human microbiome plays a role in health, but its full diversity remains uncharacterized, particularly outside of the gut and in international populations. We leveraged 9,428 metagenomes to reconstruct 154,723 microbial genomes (45% of high quality) spanning body sites, ages, countries, and lifestyles. We recapitulated 4,930 species-level genome bins (SGBs), 77% without genomes in public repositories (unknown SGBs [uSGBs]). uSGBs are prevalent (in 93% of well-assembled samples), expand underrepresented phyla, and are enriched in non-Westernized populations (40% of the total SGBs). We annotated 2.85 M genes in SGBs, many associated with conditions including infant development (94,000) or Westernization (106,000). SGBs and uSGBs permit deeper microbiome analyses and increase the average mappability of metagenomic reads from 67.76% to 87.51% in the gut (median 94.26%) and 65.14% to 82.34% in the mouth. We thus identify thousands of microbial genomes from yet-to-be-named species, expand the pangenomes of human-associated microbes, and allow better exploitation of metagenomic technologies.
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