Abstract

Ethnicity is consistently reported as a strong determinant of human gut microbiota. However, the bulk of these studies are from Western countries, where microbiota variations are mainly driven by relatively recent migration events. Malaysia is a multicultural society, but differences in gut microbiota persist across ethnicities. We hypothesized that migrant ethnic groups continue to share fundamental gut traits with the population in the country of origin due to shared cultural practices despite subsequent geographical separation. To test this hypothesis, the 16S rRNA gene amplicons from 16 studies comprising three major ethnic groups in Malaysia were analysed, covering 636 Chinese, 248 Indian and 123 Malay individuals from four countries (China, India, Indonesia and Malaysia). A confounder-adjusted permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) detected a significant association between ethnicity and the gut microbiota (PERMANOVA R 2=0.005, pseudo-F=2.643, P=0.001). A sparse partial least squares – discriminant analysis model trained using the gut microbiota of individuals from China, India and Indonesia (representation of Chinese, Indian and Malay ethnic group, respectively) showed a better-than-random performance in classifying Malaysian of Chinese descent, although the performance for Indian and Malay were modest (true prediction rate, Chinese=0.60, Indian=0.49, Malay=0.44). Separately, differential abundance analysis singled out Ligilactobacillus as being elevated in Indians. We postulate that despite the strong influence of geographical factors on the gut microbiota, cultural similarity due to a shared ethnic origin drives the presence of a shared gut microbiota composition. The interplay of these factors will likely depend on the circumstances of particular groups of migrants.

Highlights

  • Our understanding of the role of human gut microbiota in health and diseases has increased significantly over the past two decades [1,2,3]

  • We recently reported gut microbiota variation in a multiethnic Malaysian community with a relatively equal socioeconomic status [15]

  • Through this meta-­ analysis, we demonstrate the importance of the ethnic origin of an individual in influencing the gut microbiota

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Our understanding of the role of human gut microbiota in health and diseases has increased significantly over the past two decades [1,2,3]. Due to the plasticity of the human gut microbiota, the links between disease and the compositional microbiota changes are often complicated [6] This challenge highlights the need for a comprehensive understanding of the confounding factors that drive gut microbiota variation to accurately distinguish clinically irrelevant ‘noise’ from dysbiosis, i.e. the perturbation of the healthy gut microbiota [7].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call