Shotgun metagenomics reveals interkingdom association between intestinal bacteria and fungi involving competition for nutrients
Date
2023-12-14Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/10850DOI
10.1186/s40168-023-01693-w
ISSN
2049-2618
WOS
001124691500001
PMID
38098063
Abstract
Background
The accuracy of internal-transcribed-spacer (ITS) and shotgun metagenomics has not been robustly evaluated, and the effect of diet on the composition and function of the bacterial and fungal gut microbiome in a longitudinal setting has been poorly investigated. Here we compared two approaches to study the fungal community (ITS and shotgun metagenomics), proposed an enrichment protocol to perform a reliable mycobiome analysis using a comprehensive in-house fungal database, and correlated dietary data with both bacterial and fungal communities.
Results
We found that shotgun DNA sequencing after a new enrichment protocol combined with the most comprehensive and novel fungal databases provided a cost-effective approach to perform gut mycobiome profiling at the species level and to integrate bacterial and fungal community analyses in fecal samples. The mycobiome was significantly more variable than the bacterial community at the compositional and functional levels. Notably, we showed that microbial diversity, composition, and functions were associated with habitual diet composition instead of driven by global dietary changes. Our study indicates a potential competitive inter-kingdom interaction between bacteria and fungi for food foraging.
Conclusion
Together, our present work proposes an efficient workflow to study the human gut microbiome integrating robustly fungal, bacterial, and dietary data. These findings will further advance our knowledge of the interaction between gut bacteria and fungi and pave the way for future investigations in human mycobiome.
Keywords
Comprehensive database; Diet; MicrobiomeBibliographic citation
Xie Z, Canalda-Baltrons A, D’Enfert C, Manichanh C. Shotgun metagenomics reveals interkingdom association between intestinal bacteria and fungi involving competition for nutrients. Microbiome. 2023 Dec 14;11:275.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- VHIR - Articles científics [1751]
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