Abstract

Gut microbiota in a healthy population is shaped by various geographic, demographic and lifestyle factors. Although the majority of research remains focused on the bacterial community, recent efforts to include the remaining microbial members like viruses, archaea and especially fungi revealed various functions they perform in the gut. Using the amplicon sequencing approach we analysed bacterial and fungal gut communities in a Slovenian cohort of 186 healthy volunteers. In the bacterial microbiome we detected 253 different genera. A core microbiome analysis revealed high consistency with previous studies, most prominently showing that genera Faecalibacterium, Bacteroides and Roseburia regularly comprise the core community. We detected a total of 195 fungal genera, but the majority of these showed low prevalence and are likely transient foodborne contaminations. The fungal community showed a low diversity per sample and a large interindividual variability. The most abundant fungi were Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans. These, along with representatives from genera Penicillium and Debaryomyces, cover 82% of obtained reads. We report three significant questionnaire-based host covariates associated with microbiota composition. Bacterial community was associated with age and gender. More specifically, bacterial diversity was increased with age and was higher in the female population compared to male. The analysis of fungal community showed that more time dedicated to physical activity resulted in a higher fungal diversity and lower abundance of S. cerevisiae. This is likely dependent on different diets, which were reported by participants according to the respective rates of physical activity.

Highlights

  • The human gut microbiota is a diverse community comprised of bacteria, fungi, archaea, viruses and protozoa

  • We report age- and gender-associated patterns in the bacterial communities, and a weak association between the time dedicated to physical activity and the fungal community, which is likely influenced by different dietary habits coinciding with physical activity

  • Amplicon sequencing approach targeting V3V4 variable region of 16S rRNA gene was used to investigate the bacterial communities in a group of 186 healthy volunteers from the Slovenian population

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Summary

Introduction

The human gut microbiota is a diverse community comprised of bacteria, fungi, archaea, viruses and protozoa. These microorganisms co-exist in a complex interdependence, shaped by countless microbe-microbe and microbe-host interactions. Bacteria dominate the gut microbiome, representing approximately 99.9% of the total cell population. Archaea and protozoa combine to fulfill the remaining 0.1% [1,2].

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