Micro-co-evolution of Host Genetics with Gut Microbiome in Three Chinese Ethnic Groups

2021 
Understanding the micro-co-evolution of the human gut microbiome with host genetics is challenging but essential in both evolutionary and medical studies. To gain insight into the interactions between host genetic variation and the gut microbiome, we analyzed both the human genome and gut microbiome collected from a cohort of 190 students in a same boarding college and representing three ethnic groups, Uyghur, Kazakh, and Han Chinese. We found that differences in gut microbiome were stronger between genetically distinct ethnic groups than those genetically closely related ones in taxonomic composition, functional composition, enterotype stratification, and microbiome genetic differentiation. We also observed considerable correlations between host genetic variants and the abundance of a subset of gut microbial species. Notably, interactions between gut microbiome species and host genetic variants might have coordinated effects on specific human phenotypes. Bacteroides ovatus, previously reported to modulate intestinal immunity, is significantly correlated with the host genetic variant rs12899811 (meta-P=5.55×10-5), which regulates the VPS33B expression in the colon, acting as a tumor suppressor of colorectal cancer. These results advance our understanding of the micro-co-evolution of the human gut microbiome and their interactive effects with host genetic variation on phenotypic diversity.
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