Abstract

In an effort to better understand the ancestral state of the human distal gut microbiome, we examine feces retrieved from archaeological contexts (coprolites). To accomplish this, we pyrosequenced the 16S rDNA V3 region from duplicate coprolite samples recovered from three archaeological sites, each representing a different depositional environment: Hinds Cave (∼8000 years B.P.) in the southern United States, Caserones (1600 years B.P.) in northern Chile, and Rio Zape in northern Mexico (1400 years B.P.). Clustering algorithms grouped samples from the same site. Phyletic representation was more similar within sites than between them. A Bayesian approach to source-tracking was used to compare the coprolite data to published data from known sources that include, soil, compost, human gut from rural African children, human gut, oral and skin from US cosmopolitan adults and non-human primate gut. The data from the Hinds Cave samples largely represented unknown sources. The Caserones samples, retrieved directly from natural mummies, matched compost in high proportion. A substantial and robust proportion of Rio Zape data was predicted to match the gut microbiome found in traditional rural communities, with more minor matches to other sources. One of the Rio Zape samples had taxonomic representation consistent with a child. To provide an idealized scenario for sample preservation, we also applied source tracking to previously published data for Ötzi the Iceman and a soldier frozen for 93 years on a glacier. Overall these studies reveal that human microbiome data has been preserved in some coprolites, and these preserved human microbiomes match more closely to those from the rural communities than to those from cosmopolitan communities. These results suggest that the modern cosmopolitan lifestyle resulted in a dramatic change to the human gut microbiome.

Highlights

  • The human distal gut is a complex bacterial bioreactor housing a 100 times the number of genes than its human host genome [1] and functions as a vital adaptive ‘‘organ’’ [2]

  • One consideration is that core aspects of microbiomes observed in modern cosmopolitan populations today may underrepresent core aspects of human microbiomes that had existed historically, or prehistorically

  • The results suggest that there are aspects of ancestral human microbiomes that are atypical of modern cosmopolitan populations, and they reveal novel avenues to explore the prehistoric human condition

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Summary

Introduction

The human distal gut is a complex bacterial bioreactor housing a 100 times the number of genes than its human host genome [1] and functions as a vital adaptive ‘‘organ’’ [2]. The genomics of microbial ecologies (microbiomes) has gained great attention recently, in part, because the Human Microbiome Project (HMP) a U.S National Institutes of Health Initiative [3]. The modern cosmopolitan transformation, such as the advent of processed foods, antibiotics and other systemic drugs, and various sanitation technologies, has impacted our interaction with microbes. This transformation has reduced the spread of aggressive infectious diseases, which are problematic for the densely populated populations. These interventions are far from targeted strikes, and a wide range of potentially beneficial microbes are caught in the crossfire [4]. The result is a potential increased risk for autoimmune diseases among other health related conditions [4,6,7,8,9,10]

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