Abstract

BackgroundDisturbance to human microbiota may underlie several pathologies. Yet, we lack a comprehensive understanding of how lifestyle affects the dynamics of human-associated microbial communities.ResultsHere, we link over 10,000 longitudinal measurements of human wellness and action to the daily gut and salivary microbiota dynamics of two individuals over the course of one year. These time series show overall microbial communities to be stable for months. However, rare events in each subjects’ life rapidly and broadly impacted microbiota dynamics. Travel from the developed to the developing world in one subject led to a nearly two-fold increase in the Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes ratio, which reversed upon return. Enteric infection in the other subject resulted in the permanent decline of most gut bacterial taxa, which were replaced by genetically similar species. Still, even during periods of overall community stability, the dynamics of select microbial taxa could be associated with specific host behaviors. Most prominently, changes in host fiber intake positively correlated with next-day abundance changes among 15% of gut microbiota members.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that although human-associated microbial communities are generally stable, they can be quickly and profoundly altered by common human actions and experiences.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/gb-2014-15-7-r89) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Disturbance to human microbiota may underlie several pathologies

  • 195 operational taxonomic unit (OTU) are found in 95% of Subject A’s saliva microbiota samples over 1 year. These taxa only represent a small minority of the total OTUs detected in Subject A’s saliva, which is consistent with a previous study of human microbiota dynamics [8]

  • We found that most OTUs rejected the Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) null hypothesis, confirming the visual appearance of microbiota stability

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Summary

Introduction

Disturbance to human microbiota may underlie several pathologies. Yet, we lack a comprehensive understanding of how lifestyle affects the dynamics of human-associated microbial communities. Studies across mice and humans suggest that common aspects of the modern Western lifestyle, including antibiotics [1,9,10,11] and high-fat diets [2], can persistently alter commensal microbial communities. Those microbial disturbances may increase pathogen susceptibility [3], obesity [4,12], and auto-inflammatory disease [5], maladies which are becoming more frequent in the developed world.

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