Nature Communications (Jan 2024)

Defining the biogeographical map and potential bacterial translocation of microbiome in human ‘surface organs’

  • Jun-Jun She,
  • Wei-Xin Liu,
  • Xiao-Ming Ding,
  • Gang Guo,
  • Jing Han,
  • Fei-Yu Shi,
  • Harry Cheuk-Hay Lau,
  • Chen-Guang Ding,
  • Wu-Jun Xue,
  • Wen Shi,
  • Gai-Xia Liu,
  • Zhe Zhang,
  • Chen-Hao Hu,
  • Yinnan Chen,
  • Chi Chun Wong,
  • Jun Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44720-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The microbiome in a specific human organ has been well-studied, but few reports have investigated the multi-organ microbiome as a whole. Here, we aim to analyse the intra-individual inter-organ and intra-organ microbiome in deceased humans. We collected 1608 samples from 53 sites of 7 surface organs (oral cavity, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, appendix, large intestine and skin; n = 33 subjects) and performed microbiome profiling, including 16S full-length sequencing. Microbial diversity varied dramatically among organs, and core microbial species co-existed in different intra-individual organs. We deciphered microbial changes across distinct intra-organ sites, and identified signature microbes, their functional traits, and interactions specific to each site. We revealed significant microbial heterogeneity between paired mucosa-lumen samples of stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. Finally, we established the landscape of inter-organ relationships of microbes along the digestive tract. Therefore, we generate a catalogue of bacterial composition, diversity, interaction, functional traits, and bacterial translocation in human at inter-organ and intra-organ levels.