Microbiome Geographic Population Structure (mGPS) Detects Fine-Scale Geography.

IF 3.2 2区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Genome Biology and Evolution Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1093/gbe/evae209
Yali Zhang, Leo McCarthy, Emil Ruff, Eran Elhaik
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Abstract

Over the past decade, sequencing data generated by large microbiome projects showed that taxa exhibit patchy geographical distribution, raising questions about the geospatial dynamics that shape natural microbiomes and the spread of antimicrobial resistance genes. Answering these questions requires distinguishing between local and nonlocal microorganisms and identifying the source sites for the latter. Predicting the source sites and migration routes of microbiota has been envisioned for decades but was hampered by the lack of data, tools, and understanding of the processes governing biodiversity. State-of-the-art biogeographical tools suffer from low resolution and cannot predict biogeographical patterns at a scale relevant to ecological, medical, or epidemiological applications. Analyzing urban, soil, and marine microorganisms, we found that some taxa exhibit regional-specific composition and abundance, suggesting they can be used as biogeographical biomarkers. We developed the microbiome geographic population structure, a machine learning-based tool that utilizes microbial relative sequence abundances to yield a fine-scale source site for microorganisms. Microbiome geographic population structure predicted the source city for 92% of the samples and the within-city source for 82% of the samples, though they were often only a few hundred meters apart. Microbiome geographic population structure also predicted soil and marine sampling sites for 86% and 74% of the samples, respectively. We demonstrated that microbiome geographic population structure differentiated local from nonlocal microorganisms and used it to trace the global spread of antimicrobial resistance genes. Microbiome geographic population structure's ability to localize samples to their water body, country, city, and transit stations opens new possibilities in tracing microbiomes and has applications in forensics, medicine, and epidemiology.

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微生物组地理种群结构 (mGPS) 可检测微观地理。
在过去的十年中,大型微生物组项目产生的测序数据显示,类群呈现出零星的地理分布,从而引发了有关塑造自然微生物组和抗菌药耐药性(AMR)基因传播的地理空间动态的问题。要回答这些问题,需要区分本地和非本地微生物,并确定后者的来源地。预测微生物群的来源地和迁移路线的设想已提出数十年,但由于缺乏数据、工具和对生物多样性过程的了解而受阻。最先进的生物地理学工具分辨率低,无法预测与生态、医学或流行病学应用相关的生物地理学模式。通过分析城市、土壤和海洋微生物,我们发现一些类群表现出特定区域的组成和丰度,这表明它们可以用作生物地理生物标记。我们开发了微生物组地理种群结构(mGPS),这是一种基于机器学习的工具,它利用微生物相对序列丰度来得出微生物的细粒度来源地。mGPS 预测了 92% 样品的来源城市和 82% 样品的城市内来源地,尽管它们之间往往只有几百米的距离。我们证明了 mGPS 能够区分本地和非本地微生物,并利用它追踪 AMR 基因的全球传播。mGPS 能够将样本定位到水体、国家、城市和中转站,这为追踪微生物组提供了新的可能性,并可应用于法医、医学和流行病学。
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来源期刊
Genome Biology and Evolution
Genome Biology and Evolution EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-GENETICS & HEREDITY
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.10%
发文量
169
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: About the journal Genome Biology and Evolution (GBE) publishes leading original research at the interface between evolutionary biology and genomics. Papers considered for publication report novel evolutionary findings that concern natural genome diversity, population genomics, the structure, function, organisation and expression of genomes, comparative genomics, proteomics, and environmental genomic interactions. Major evolutionary insights from the fields of computational biology, structural biology, developmental biology, and cell biology are also considered, as are theoretical advances in the field of genome evolution. GBE’s scope embraces genome-wide evolutionary investigations at all taxonomic levels and for all forms of life — within populations or across domains. Its aims are to further the understanding of genomes in their evolutionary context and further the understanding of evolution from a genome-wide perspective.
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