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The structure and diversity of strain-level variation in vaginal bacteria
Author(s) -
Brett A. Tortelli,
Amanda L. Lewis,
Justin C. Fay
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
microbial genomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.476
H-Index - 28
ISSN - 2057-5858
DOI - 10.1099/mgen.0.000543
Subject(s) - biology , microbiome , lactobacillus crispatus , lactobacillus , lactobacillus gasseri , metagenomics , gardnerella vaginalis , strain (injury) , microbiology and biotechnology , ecology , zoology , bacteria , evolutionary biology , genetics , gene , anatomy
The vaginal microbiome plays an important role in human health and species of vaginal bacteria have been associated with reproductive disease. Strain-level variation is also thought to be important, but the diversity, structure and evolutionary history of vaginal strains is not as well characterized. We developed and validated an approach to measure strain variation from metagenomic data based on SNPs within the core genomes for six species of vaginal bacteria:Gardnerella vaginalis ,Lactobacillus crispatus ,Lactobacillus iners ,Lactobacillus jensenii ,Lactobacillus gasseriandAtopobium vaginae . Despite inhabiting the same environment, strain diversity and structure varies across species. All species exceptL. inersare characterized by multiple distinct groups of strains. Even so, strain diversity is lower in theLactobacillusspecies, consistent with a more recent colonization of the human vaginal microbiome. Both strain diversity and the frequency of multi-strain samples is related to species-level diversity of the microbiome in which they occur, suggesting similar ecological factors influencing diversity within the vaginal niche. We conclude that the structure of strain-level variation provides both the motivation and means of testing whether strain-level differences contribute to the function and health consequences of the vaginal microbiome.

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