微生物群
社交网络(社会语言学)
生物
拉伤
多样性(政治)
进化生物学
趋同(经济学)
肠道微生物群
遗传学
社会学
万维网
计算机科学
社会化媒体
解剖
人类学
经济
经济增长
作者
Francesco Beghini,Jackson Pullman,Marcus Alexander,Shivkumar Vishnempet Shridhar,Drew Prinster,Adarsh Singh,Rigoberto Matute Juárez,Edoardo M. Airoldi,Ilana Brito,Nicholas A. Christakis
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2024-11-20
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-024-08222-1
摘要
When humans assemble into face-to-face social networks, they create an extended social environment that permits exposure to the microbiome of others, thereby shaping the composition and diversity of the microbiome at individual and population levels1–6. Here we use comprehensive social network mapping and detailed microbiome sequencing data in 1,787 adults within 18 isolated villages in Honduras7 to investigate the relationship between network structure and gut microbiome composition. Using both species-level and strain-level data, we show that microbial sharing occurs between many relationship types, notably including non-familial and non-household connections. Furthermore, strain-sharing extends to second-degree social connections, suggesting the relevance of a person's broader network. We also observe that socially central people are more microbially similar to the overall village than socially peripheral people. Among 301 people whose microbiome was re-measured 2 years later, we observe greater convergence in strain-sharing in connected versus otherwise similar unconnected co-villagers. Clusters of species and strains occur within clusters of people in village social networks, meaning that social networks provide the social niches within which microbiome biology and phenotypic impact are manifested. An investigation into the relationship between network structure and gut microbiome composition among people living in 18 isolated Honduras villages reveals that strain-sharing can be mediated by complex, village-wide social interactions.
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