The human gut archaeome: Identification of diverse haloarchaea in Korean subjects

Joon Yong Kim, Tae Woong Whon, Mi Young Lim, Yeon Bee Kim, Namhee Kim, Min Sung Kwon, Juseok Kim, Se Hee Lee, Hak Jong Choi, In Hyun Nam, Won Hyong Chung, Jung Ha Kim, Jin Woo Bae, Seong Woon Roh, Young Do Nam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

83 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Archaea are one of the least-studied members of the gut-dwelling autochthonous microbiota. Few studies have reported the dominance of methanogens in the archaeal microbiome (archaeome) of the human gut, although limited information regarding the diversity and abundance of other archaeal phylotypes is available. Results: We surveyed the archaeome of faecal samples collected from 897 East Asian subjects living in South Korea. In total, 42.47% faecal samples were positive for archaeal colonisation; these were subsequently subjected to archaeal 16S rRNA gene deep sequencing and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction-based abundance estimation. The mean archaeal relative abundance was 10.24 ± 4.58% of the total bacterial and archaeal abundance. We observed extensive colonisation of haloarchaea (95.54%) in the archaea-positive faecal samples, with 9.63% mean relative abundance in archaeal communities. Haloarchaea were relatively more abundant than methanogens in some samples. The presence of haloarchaea was also verified by fluorescence in situ hybridisation analysis. Owing to large inter-individual variations, we categorised the human gut archaeome into four archaeal enterotypes. Conclusions: The study demonstrated that the human gut archaeome is indigenous, responsive, and functional, expanding our understanding of the archaeal signature in the gut of human individuals. [MediaObject not available: see fulltext.].

Original languageEnglish
Article number114
JournalMicrobiome
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Aug 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s).

Keywords

  • Archaeal enterotype
  • Archaeome
  • Haloarchaea
  • Human gut
  • Population-level metataxonomic analysis

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