Abstract

BackgroundThe increasing availability of microbial genomes and environmental shotgun metagenomes provides unprecedented access to the genomic differences within related bacteria. The human oral microbiome with its diverse habitats and abundant, relatively well-characterized microbial inhabitants presents an opportunity to investigate bacterial population structures at an ecosystem scale.ResultsHere, we employ a metapangenomic approach that combines public genomes with Human Microbiome Project (HMP) metagenomes to study the diversity of microbial residents of three oral habitats: tongue dorsum, buccal mucosa, and supragingival plaque. For two exemplar taxa, Haemophilus parainfluenzae and the genus Rothia, metapangenomes reveal distinct genomic groups based on shared genome content. H. parainfluenzae genomes separate into three distinct subgroups with differential abundance between oral habitats. Functional enrichment analyses identify an operon encoding oxaloacetate decarboxylase as diagnostic for the tongue-abundant subgroup. For the genus Rothia, grouping by shared genome content recapitulates species-level taxonomy and habitat preferences. However, while most R. mucilaginosa are restricted to the tongue as expected, two genomes represent a cryptic population of R. mucilaginosa in many buccal mucosa samples. For both H. parainfluenzae and the genus Rothia, we identify not only limitations in the ability of cultivated organisms to represent populations in their native environment, but also specifically which cultivar gene sequences are absent or ubiquitous.ConclusionsOur findings provide insights into population structure and biogeography in the mouth and form specific hypotheses about habitat adaptation. These results illustrate the power of combining metagenomes and pangenomes to investigate the ecology and evolution of bacteria across analytical scales.

Highlights

  • The human microbiome encompasses tremendous microbial diversity

  • We investigated the degree to which each gene in the pangenome is represented in populations from the healthy human mouth using metagenomic data from the Human Microbiome Project [1]

  • Metapangenome workflow and the environmental core/accessory designation A metapangenome provides an integrated overview of how genes are distributed across reference genomes and across metagenomes [13, 29]

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Summary

Introduction

The growing recognition of this diversity and its importance for human well-being prompted a major effort to investigate the identity and distribution patterns of bacteria throughout the human body, the Human Microbiome Project [1]. More recent studies have focused on finer-scale patterns, such as the role of host individuality in determining microbiome composition, the number and diversity of strains that can co-exist within a habitat, and the distribution of strains across body sites [2,3,4]. The sheer numbers and genetic diversity of bacteria in even a simple real-world microbiome present significant challenges to study. The human oral microbiome with its diverse habitats and abundant, relatively well-characterized microbial inhabitants presents an opportunity to investigate bacterial population structures at an ecosystem scale

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