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  • 2025
  • Kioneshe
  •   DSpace Mwanzo
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  • Published Paper
  • Health and Wellbeing
  • 2025
  • Kioneshe
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Expanding the Human Gut Microbiome Atlas of Africa

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Tarehe
2025
Mwandishi
Maghini, D. G.
Kisiangani, I.
Oduaran, O. H.
Wirbel, J.
Olubayo, L. A. I.
Smyth, N.
Mathema, T.
Belger, C. W.
Agongo, G.
Boua, P. R.
Choma, S. S.
Gomez-Olive, F. X.
Mashaba, G. R.
Micklesfield, L.
Mohamed, S. F.
Nonterah, E. A.
Norris, S.
Sorgho, H.
Tollman, S.
Wafawanaka, F.
Hazelhurst, S.
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Kwa ufupi
Population studies provide insights into the interplay between the gut microbiome and geographical, lifestyle, genetic and environmental factors. However, low- and middle-income countries, in which approximately 84% of the world's population lives are not equitably represented in large-scale gut microbiome research. Here we present the AWI-Gen 2 Microbiome Project, a cross-sectional gut microbiome study sampling 1,801 women from Burkina Faso, Ghana, Kenya and South Africa. By engaging with communities that range from rural and horticultural to post-industrial and urban informal settlements, we capture a far greater breadth of the world's population diversity. Using shotgun metagenomic sequencing, we identify taxa with geographic and lifestyle associations, including Treponema and Cryptobacteroides species loss and Bifidobacterium species gain in urban populations. We uncover 1,005 bacterial metagenome-assembled genomes, and we identify antibiotic susceptibility as a factor that might drive Treponema succinifaciens absence in urban populations. Finally, we find an HIV infection signature defined by several taxa not previously associated with HIV, including Dysosmobacter welbionis and Enterocloster sp. This study represents the largest population-representative survey of gut metagenomes of African individuals so far, and paired with extensive clinical biomarkers and demographic data, provides extensive opportunity for microbiome-related discovery.
Somo
Gen 2 Microbiome Project; Human Gut Microbiome; Geographic and lifestyle Associations; Antibiotic Susceptibility
URI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08485-8
http://knowhub.aphrc.org/handle/123456789/2510
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