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Widespread extinctions of co-diversified primate gut bacterial symbionts from humans

  • Jon G. Sanders
  • , Daniel D. Sprockett
  • , Yingying Li
  • , Deus Mjungu
  • , Elizabeth V. Lonsdorf
  • , Jean-Bosco N. Ndjango
  • , Alexander V. Georgiev
  • , John A. Hart
  • , Crickette M. Sanz
  • , David B. Morgan
  • , Martine Peeters
  • , Beatrice H. Hahn
  • , Andrew H. Moeller
  • Cornell University
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Gombe Stream Research Center
  • Emory University
  • University of Kisangani
  • Lukuru Wildlife Research Foundation, Kinshasa
  • Washington University in St Louis
  • Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago
  • Université de Montpellier

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

221 Wedi eu Llwytho i Lawr (Pure)

Crynodeb

Humans and other primates harbour complex gut bacterial communities that influence health and disease, but the evolutionary histories of these symbioses remain unclear. This is partly due to limited information about the microbiota of ancestral primates. Here, using phylogenetic analyses of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), we show that hundreds of gut bacterial clades diversified in parallel (that is, co-diversified) with primate species over millions of years, but that humans have experienced widespread losses of these ancestral symbionts. Analyses of 9,460 human and non-human primate MAGs, including newly generated MAGs from chimpanzees and bonobos, revealed significant co-diversification within ten gut bacterial phyla, including Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota and Bacteroidota. Strikingly, ~44% of the co-diversifying clades detected in African apes were absent from available metagenomic data from humans and ~54% were absent from industrialized human populations. In contrast, only ~3% of non-co-diversifying clades detected in African apes were absent from humans. Co-diversifying clades present in both humans and chimpanzees displayed consistent genomic signatures of natural selection between the two host species but differed in functional content from co-diversifying clades lost from humans, consistent with selection against certain functions. This study discovers host-species-specific bacterial symbionts that predate hominid diversification, many of which have undergone accelerated extinctions from human populations.
Iaith wreiddiolSaesneg
Tudalennau (o-i)1039-1050
Nifer y tudalennau12
CyfnodolynNature Microbiology
Cyfrol8
Rhif cyhoeddi6
Dyddiad ar-lein cynnar11 Mai 2023
Dynodwyr Gwrthrych Digidol (DOIs)
StatwsCyhoeddwyd - Meh 2023

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