| Literature DB >> 35297145 |
Zelong Zhao1, Jingwei Jiang1, Jie Zheng1, Yongjia Pan1, Ying Dong1, Zhong Chen1, Shan Gao1, Yao Xiao1, Pingzhe Jiang1, Xuda Wang1, Gaohua Zhang1, Bai Wang1, Di Yu1, Zhiyu Fu1, Xiaoyan Guan1, Hongjuan Sun1, Zunchun Zhou1.
Abstract
Nowadays, the true economic and nutritional value of food is underpinned by both origin and quality traits, more often expressed as increased quality benefits derived from the origin source. Gut microbiota contribute to food metabolism and host health, therefore, it may be suitable as a qualifying indicator of origin and quality of economic species. Here, we investigated relationships between the gut microbiota of the sea cucumber (Apostichopus japonicus), a valuable aquaculture species in Asia, with their origins and quality metrics. Based on data from 287 intestinal samples, we generated the first biogeographical patterns for A. japonicus gut microbiota from origins across China. Importantly, A. japonicus origins were predicted using the random forest model that was constructed using 20 key gut bacterial genera, with 97.6% accuracy. Furthermore, quality traits such as saponin, fat and taurine were also successfully predicted by random forest models based on gut microbiota, with approximately 80% consistency between predicted and true values. We showed that substantial variations existed in the gut microbiota and quality variables in A. japonicus across different origins, and we also demonstrated the great potential of gut microbiota to track A. japonicus origins and predict their quality traits.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35297145 DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Microbiol ISSN: 1462-2912 Impact factor: 5.476