2017
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14435
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Oral microbiomes from hunter‐gatherers and traditional farmers reveal shifts in commensal balance and pathogen load linked to diet

Abstract: Maladaptation to modern diets has been implicated in several chronic disorders.Given the higher prevalence of disease such as dental caries and chronic gum diseases in industrialized societies, we sought to investigate the impact of different subsistence strategies on oral health and physiology, as documented by the oral microbiome. To control for confounding variables such as environment and host genetics, we sampled saliva from three pairs of populations of hunter-gatherers and traditional farmers living in … Show more

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Cited by 101 publications
(108 citation statements)
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“…Sequencing reads were classified using Kraken v0.10.6(55) against a custom Kraken database previously constructed from all available RefSeq genomes for bacteria, archaea, viruses, protozoa, and fungi, as well as all RefSeq plasmids (as of September 19 th 2017) and three human genome reference sequences(56). The size of the final database after shrinking was 193 Gb, covering 38,190 distinct NCBI taxonomic IDs.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sequencing reads were classified using Kraken v0.10.6(55) against a custom Kraken database previously constructed from all available RefSeq genomes for bacteria, archaea, viruses, protozoa, and fungi, as well as all RefSeq plasmids (as of September 19 th 2017) and three human genome reference sequences(56). The size of the final database after shrinking was 193 Gb, covering 38,190 distinct NCBI taxonomic IDs.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The advent of affordable high-throughput sequencing has seen an everincreasing number of population genomics studies in a wide range of study systems (e.g., Der Sarkissian et al, 2015;Jones et al, 2012;Nater et al, 2017;Poelstra et al, 2014). This affords an unprecedented opportunity to exploit sequencing data to secondarily investigate the microbial communities associated with the sampled tissue of their host (Ames et al, 2015;Lassalle et al, 2018;Mangul et al, 2016;Salzberg et al, 2005;Zhang et al, 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2a). The 4930 representative human SGBs from a recent large-scale assembly study that included available oral metagenomic samples 16 led to 79.72% mapping, and the representative oral 3589 SGBs from the current study instead led to 88.06% mapping (median for all samples), especially for metagenomes from the U.S. and Germany; and a median of 85.29% mapping even for 81 saliva and subgingival metagenomes from three cohorts that were not used in the assembly process 3436 (Fig. 2a , Supplementary Table 1 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%