Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis

The link between the gut microbiota and metabolic syndrome (MetS) has attracted widespread attention. Christensenellaceae was recently described as an important player in human health, while its distribution and relationship with MetS in Chinese population is still unknown. This study sought to obse...

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Main Authors: Xiang Li, Zewen Li, Yan He, Pan Li, Hongwei Zhou, Nianyi Zeng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-08-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9591.pdf
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author Xiang Li
Zewen Li
Yan He
Pan Li
Hongwei Zhou
Nianyi Zeng
author_facet Xiang Li
Zewen Li
Yan He
Pan Li
Hongwei Zhou
Nianyi Zeng
author_sort Xiang Li
collection DOAJ
description The link between the gut microbiota and metabolic syndrome (MetS) has attracted widespread attention. Christensenellaceae was recently described as an important player in human health, while its distribution and relationship with MetS in Chinese population is still unknown. This study sought to observe the association between Christensenellaceae and metabolic indexes in a large sample of residents in South China. A total of 4,781 people from the GGMP project were included, and the fecal microbiota composition of these individuals was characterized by 16S rRNA sequencing and analyzed the relation between Christensenellaceae and metabolism using QIIME (Quantitative Insight Into Microbial Ecology, Version 1.9.1). The results demonstrated that microbial richness and diversity were increased in the group with a high abundance of Christensenellaceae, who showed a greater complexity of the co-occurrence network with other bacteria than residents who lacked Christensenellaceae. The enriched bacterial taxa were predominantly represented by Oscillospira, Ruminococcaceae, RF39, Rikenellaceae and Akkermansia as the Christensenellaceae abundance increased, while the abundances of Veillonella, Fusobacterium and Klebsiella were significantly reduced. Furthermore, Christensenellaceae was negatively correlated with the pathological features of MetS, such as obesity, hypertriglyceridemia and body mass index (BMI). We found reduced levels of lipid biosynthesis and energy metabolism pathways in people with a high abundance of Christensenellaceae, which may explain the negative relationship between body weight and Christensenellaceae. In conclusion, we found a negative correlation between Christensenellaceae and MetS in a large Chinese population and reported the geographical distribution of Christensenellaceae in the GGMP study. The association data from this population-level research support the investigation of strains within Christensenellaceae as potentially beneficial gut microbes.
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spelling doaj.art-f91ca8beace345f5a99490a760a6b14b2023-12-03T09:30:39ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-08-018e959110.7717/peerj.9591Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysisXiang LiZewen LiYan HePan LiHongwei ZhouNianyi ZengThe link between the gut microbiota and metabolic syndrome (MetS) has attracted widespread attention. Christensenellaceae was recently described as an important player in human health, while its distribution and relationship with MetS in Chinese population is still unknown. This study sought to observe the association between Christensenellaceae and metabolic indexes in a large sample of residents in South China. A total of 4,781 people from the GGMP project were included, and the fecal microbiota composition of these individuals was characterized by 16S rRNA sequencing and analyzed the relation between Christensenellaceae and metabolism using QIIME (Quantitative Insight Into Microbial Ecology, Version 1.9.1). The results demonstrated that microbial richness and diversity were increased in the group with a high abundance of Christensenellaceae, who showed a greater complexity of the co-occurrence network with other bacteria than residents who lacked Christensenellaceae. The enriched bacterial taxa were predominantly represented by Oscillospira, Ruminococcaceae, RF39, Rikenellaceae and Akkermansia as the Christensenellaceae abundance increased, while the abundances of Veillonella, Fusobacterium and Klebsiella were significantly reduced. Furthermore, Christensenellaceae was negatively correlated with the pathological features of MetS, such as obesity, hypertriglyceridemia and body mass index (BMI). We found reduced levels of lipid biosynthesis and energy metabolism pathways in people with a high abundance of Christensenellaceae, which may explain the negative relationship between body weight and Christensenellaceae. In conclusion, we found a negative correlation between Christensenellaceae and MetS in a large Chinese population and reported the geographical distribution of Christensenellaceae in the GGMP study. The association data from this population-level research support the investigation of strains within Christensenellaceae as potentially beneficial gut microbes.https://peerj.com/articles/9591.pdfChristensenellaceae16S rRNA sequencingMetabolic syndromeHuman gut microbiotaBioinformatic analysis
spellingShingle Xiang Li
Zewen Li
Yan He
Pan Li
Hongwei Zhou
Nianyi Zeng
Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
PeerJ
Christensenellaceae
16S rRNA sequencing
Metabolic syndrome
Human gut microbiota
Bioinformatic analysis
title Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
title_full Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
title_fullStr Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
title_full_unstemmed Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
title_short Regional distribution of Christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population-level analysis
title_sort regional distribution of christensenellaceae and its associations with metabolic syndrome based on a population level analysis
topic Christensenellaceae
16S rRNA sequencing
Metabolic syndrome
Human gut microbiota
Bioinformatic analysis
url https://peerj.com/articles/9591.pdf
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AT panli regionaldistributionofchristensenellaceaeanditsassociationswithmetabolicsyndromebasedonapopulationlevelanalysis
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