1.
Fecal microbial load is a major determinant of gut microbiome variation and a confounder for disease associations.
Nishijima S, Stankevic E, Aasmets O,
Schmidt TSB, Nagata N,
Keller MI,
Ferretti P, Juel HB,
Fullam A,
Robbani SM,
Schudoma C, Hansen JK, Holm LA, Israelsen M, Schierwagen R, Torp N, Telzerow A, Hercog R,
Kandels S,
Hazenbrink DHM,
Arumugam M, Bendtsen F, Brøns C, Fonvig CE, Holm JC, Nielsen T, Pedersen JS, Thiele MS, Trebicka J, Org E, Krag A, Hansen T,
Kuhn M,
Bork P, GALAXY and MicrobLiver Consortia
Cell.
2024 Nov 4; [Epub ahead of print] PubMed:
39541968.Abstract
The microbiota in individual habitats differ in both relative composition and absolute abundance. While sequencing approaches determine the relative abundances of taxa and genes, they do not provide information on their absolute abundances. Here, we developed a machine-learning approach to predict fecal microbial loads (microbial cells per gram) solely from relative abundance data. Applying our prediction model to a large-scale metagenomic dataset (n = 34,539), we demonstrated that microbial load is the major determinant of gut microbiome variation and is associated with numerous host factors, including age, diet, and medication. We further found that for several diseases, changes in microbial load, rather than the disease condition itself, more strongly explained alterations in patients' gut microbiome. Adjusting for this effect substantially reduced the statistical significance of the majority of disease-associated species. Our analysis reveals that the fecal microbial load is a major confounder in microbiome studies, highlighting its importance for understanding microbiome variation in health and disease.