| Literature DB >> 24280061 |
Yoshiki Vázquez-Baeza1, Meg Pirrung, Antonio Gonzalez, Rob Knight.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As microbial ecologists take advantage of high-throughput sequencing technologies to describe microbial communities across ever-increasing numbers of samples, new analysis tools are required to relate the distribution of microbes among larger numbers of communities, and to use increasingly rich and standards-compliant metadata to understand the biological factors driving these relationships. In particular, the Earth Microbiome Project drives these needs by profiling the genomic content of tens of thousands of samples across multiple environment types.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24280061 PMCID: PMC4076506 DOI: 10.1186/2047-217X-2-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gigascience ISSN: 2047-217X Impact factor: 6.524
Figure 1EMPeror display showing the combination of the datasets described in [[3],[20]-[22]], consisting of 5740 samples representing human auditory canal, skin, nostril, feces, vagina, urine, hair and oral body habitats. (A) Data colored by body habitat; (B-1) Principal coordinate 1 (PC1) vs. PC2 with the same the data colored according to the age of the subjects (a continuous variable). (B-2) PC1 vs. an explicit time axis. The results allow us to see by immediate visual inspection that the body habitats are remarkably different between each other and that this is consistent through time as a human reaches adulthood.
Studies used to create Figure1
| Moving pictures of the human microbiome | Samples from two subjects are collected for up to 15 months in three body sites (oral, skin and gut) | 1964 | [ |
| Bacterial community variation in human body habitats across space and time | Samples from healthy adult human samples from eight subjects of up to 27 body sites | 585 | [ |
| Structure, function and diversity of the healthy human microbiome | Samples from 242 healthy adult human samples from up to eighteen different body sites | 3131 | [ |
| Succession of microbial consortia in the developing infant gut microbiome | Gut samples collected biweekly from an infant through the first 2.5 years of life | 60 | [ |