| Literature DB >> 28836939 |
Brittany A Demmitt1,2, Robin P Corley2,3, Brooke M Huibregtse2,3, Matthew C Keller2,3, John K Hewitt2,3, Matthew B McQueen2,4, Rob Knight5,6,7, Ivy McDermott1, Kenneth S Krauter8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human oral microbiome is formed early in development. Its composition is influenced by environmental factors including diet, substance use, oral health, and overall health and disease. The influence of human genes on the composition and stability of the oral microbiome is still poorly understood. We studied both environmental and genetic characteristics on the oral microbiome in a large twin sample as well as in a large cohort of unrelated individuals. We identify several significantly heritable features of the oral microbiome. The heritability persists in twins even when their cohabitation changes. The heritability of these traits correlates with the cumulative genetic contributions of over half a million single nucleotide sequence variants measured in a different population of unrelated individuals. Comparison of same-sex and opposite sex cotwins showed no significant differences. We show that two new loci on chromosomes 7 and 12 are associated with the most heritable traits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28836939 PMCID: PMC5571580 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4008-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Beta diversity comparisons between twin pairs: Beta diversity measurements for MZ(n = 366 pairs), DZ(n = 386 pairs, and unrelated individuals(n = 37,832 pairs). Mann-Whitney U two-tailed test was applied between groups (Bray-Curtis and Weighted UniFrac Beta Diversity Measurements shown). P-values were determined with 10,000 permutations of the group labels. a. Entire twin sample(n = 752 pairs) b. only twin pairs either 18 and younger or those over the age of 18 and living together(n = 588 pairs). (**) p-value < 0.0005, (*) p-value < 0.05)
Fig. 2Intraclass correlation coefficient comparison: Intraclass correlation coefficient values for MZ and DZ twin pairs of taxa abundances(n = 752 pairs). Taxa are grouped by phyla in the bar graph. The ICC values between MZ and DZ twin pairs were compared with the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test with 10,000 permutations of the zygosity labels (Pvalue==0.00629937). The inset shows a plot of the ICC values for MZ vs. DZ (line is where MZ = DZ)
Fig. 3Heritabiltiy estimate comparison: Twin model heritability estimates vs amount of variate accounted for by common single nucleotide (“heritability”) via GCTA for the Euoropean population (n = 818) for traits continuous in both samples (n = 40). The correlation between the estimates is significant with a P value of 0.00609
Fig. 4GWAS of genus Granulicatella. a Manhattan plot of the GWAS analysis in the European ancestry sample(n = 823). The red line represents the threshold of genome wide significance(p-value < 5 × 10−8). The abundance of the genus Granulicatella was transformed to z-scores in R and used as the phenotype for the European GWAS (see Methods). b Locus Zoom plot of the chromosome 7 at the most significant GWAS hit. c SNP plot for the genes IMMP2L, INHBA-AS1, and full coding gene of INHBA of the KGG analyses of the GWAS for the abundance of the genus Granulicatella
Fig. 5GWAS of Unweighted UniFrac principal coordinate 3. Principal Coordinate 3 of Unweighted UniFrac was transformed to z-scores in R and used as the phenotype for the GWAS analyses. a Manhattan plot of the GWAS analysis in the European ancestry sample(n = 823) and b Admixture American ancestry sample (n = 344). c Locus Zoom plot of the chromosome 12 at the most significant Meta-GWAS hit. d-e. Violin plots of the Principal Coordinate 3 of Unweighted UniFrac for each genotype within each ancestry population (d EUR: GG n = 705, GC n = 112, CC n = 6; e. ADM: GG n = 193, GC n = 133, CC n = 18)