Abstract
Background
Disturbance to human microbiota may underlie several pathologies. Yet, we lack a comprehensive understanding of how lifestyle affects the dynamics of human-associated microbial communities.
Results
Here, we link over 10,000 longitudinal measurements of human wellness and action to the daily gut and salivary microbiota dynamics of two individuals over the course of one year. These time series show overall microbial communities to be stable for months. However, rare events in each subjects’ life rapidly and broadly impacted microbiota dynamics. Travel from the developed to the developing world in one subject led to a nearly two-fold increase in the Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes ratio, which reversed upon return. Enteric infection in the other subject resulted in the permanent decline of most gut bacterial taxa, which were replaced by genetically similar species. Still, even during periods of overall community stability, the dynamics of select microbial taxa could be associated with specific host behaviors. Most prominently, changes in host fiber intake positively correlated with next-day abundance changes among 15% of gut microbiota members.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that although human-associated microbial communities are generally stable, they can be quickly and profoundly altered by common human actions and experiences.
Electronic supplementary material
The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/gb-2014-15-7-r89) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Background
The temporal dynamics of host-associated microbial communities (the microbiota) are of growing interest due to these communities’ relevance for health [1–5]. Normally, human microbiota remain stable for months, and possibly even years [6–8]. However, studies across mice and humans suggest that common aspects of the modern Western lifestyle, including antibiotics [1, 9–11] and high-fat diets [2], can persistently alter commensal microbial communities. In turn, those microbial disturbances may increase pathogen susceptibility [3], obesity [4, 12], and auto-inflammatory disease [5], maladies which are becoming more frequent in the developed world.
In spite of their potential health impact, a full list of lifestyle factors capable of altering human microbiota remains incomplete. Interventional studies are regularly performed to identify host behaviors that affect microbial dynamics, and they have notably demonstrated human gut microbial sensitivity to antibiotics [9–11], bowel surgery [13], and short-term diet shifts [14, 15]. However, interventions by design only test a small number of hypotheses; thus, a large, and potentially unfeasible, number of interventional studies are needed to fully explore the rich diversity of human actions and behaviors.
An alternative approach for efficiently linking numerous host factors to microbial responses is to longitudinally observe both the host and microbiota, and to infer relationships between them. Such observational studies have recently been used to show that menstrual cycles are the primary driver of vaginal microbial dynamics in women [16], and to show that infant gut microbiota begin transitioning towards adult communities after weaning [17]. In these time series, the quantity of host lifestyle variables that can be related to microbial dynamics is only bound by the number of host factors that can be tracked. Still, host tracking is non-trivial for ethical and logistical reasons, such as the need to repeatedly survey participants and the enforcement of subject compliance. Hence, many microbiome time series have featured limited longitudinal host metadata [8, 18], making it difficult to link microbial dynamics to host behavior.
Here, we address the dearth of coupled longitudinal datasets of human lifestyle and microbiota by tracking individuals and their commensal microbial communities each day over the course of 1 year. To let subjects comprehensively record their daily lives, we equipped them with iOS devices and a diary app that we configured to simplify personal record keeping. Paired with a simple diet record parsing algorithm that we wrote, this app allowed subjects to record data each day across 349 health and lifestyle variables spanning fitness, diet, exercise, bowel movements, mood, and illness (see Additional file 1 for a full list of measured variables). Even with our streamlined diary tools, we anticipated self-tracking to be inconvenient, and so we screened for study participants who would reliably collect daily records. Our screening yielded a small cohort of two healthy, unrelated male volunteers (Subjects A and B; see Additional file 2 for more demographic information). Yet, despite this small cohort size, the 10,124 measurements of subjects’ daily activity collected over the course of 1 year provides an unprecedented window into the health and lifestyle factors potentially regulating human-associated microbial environments.
Each day, subjects were asked to collect stool and saliva samples in order to measure the dynamics of gut and oral microbial communities. Each sample was terized using high-throughput sequencing of amplified 16S ribosomal RNA, and the resulting reads were grouped into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) at 97% sequence similarity [19, 20]. After sample quality filtering, we obtained a dataset of 299 gut and 272 saliva samples from Subject A and 180 gut samples from Subject B (Figure 1).
Results and discussion
Evidence for long-term, overall community stability
We initially confirmed the general hypothesis that gut and saliva microbiota are usually stable [6, 8, 9, 18]. First, differences between individuals were much larger than variation within individuals over the course of 1 year (Figure 1A). Second, dynamics within individuals were subdivided into five periods of high overall similarity (Figure 2A-C, regions marked I-V). Third, within these stable periods, median distances between samples rapidly reach an asymptote; these dynamics are consistent with communities whose state is not changing over time (Additional file 3). Fourth, a small subset of highly abundant core taxa can be found within each stable period (Additional file 4). For example, 195 OTUs are found in 95% of Subject A’s saliva microbiota samples over 1 year. These taxa only represent a small minority of the total OTUs detected in Subject A’s saliva, which is consistent with a previous study of human microbiota dynamics [8]. Still, these core OTUs dominate the community and comprise 99.7% of total counted bacteria.
We used an Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) test [22] to quantitatively characterize individual OTU dynamics during periods of apparent overall community stability. The ADF test rejects the existence of a unit root process, such as a random walk, by testing whether time series tend to return to an equilibrium value following fluctuations. Importantly, processes like competition, which leads to the sustained growth of successful taxa and the decline of outcompeted ones, will lead to a failure of the ADF test to reject the null hypothesis. Thus, a significant ADF test suggests a restoring force governing a bacterial species’ dynamics.
We found that most OTUs rejected the ADF null hypothesis, confirming the visual appearance of microbiota stability. The ADF results indicated that between 75% and 88% of bacteria exhibited stationary dynamics during the examined date ranges (Figure 2A-C). Thus, most members of gut and saliva microbial communities may remain stable for periods lasting months. Moreover, we found no correlation between ADF test results and bacterial abundances, indicating that low- and high-abundance taxa are equally likely to be stationary. If OTUs inhabit non-overlapping niches, the observed stationary dynamics may reflect variation in niche sizes due to daily fluctuations in diet and other host factors.
Stability at the level of OTUs, however, does not necessarily indicate a lack of competition and drift. In fact, the remaining 6% to 21% of non-stationary OTUs that fail to reject the ADF null hypothesis may represent competing species in overlapping niches. If genetically similar species are more likely to compete for resources, then these non-stationary OTUs should cluster together phylogenetically. Indeed, we observe support for phylogenetic clustering of non-stationary OTUs in several time ranges (Figure 2D-F) and dynamics consistent with ecological competition (Figure 2G-I). In several cases, species replacement occurred within days (Figure 2G,H). This is surprising because it contrasts with the general stability of OTU abundances and suggests that OTU stability is not simply due to slow microbial dynamics.
In addition to competition between species, competition may occur among populations of bacteria within a single OTU. A recent study of marine bacteria showed significant competition between closely-related populations that would not be distinguishable as distinct OTUs in this study [23]. Thus, our findings support a model in which most OTUs are attracted to an equilibrium level, although ecological competition may occur within OTUs and is sometimes seen among genetically related species.
Travel and enteric infection are associated with profound community disturbance
Despite the overall evidence for microbiota stability, windows spanning notable host actions and health changes show evidence of broad community disturbance. The first window coincides with Subject A relocating from a major American metropolitan area to the capital of a developing nation in Southeast Asia between days 71 and 122 of the study. This subject was exposed to a novel diet and environment while traveling and had diarrhea on days 80 to 85 and 104 to 113. The second disruptive window accompanies an episode of food poisoning for Subject B, during which the subject tested culture positive for Salmonella sp. Consistent with this diagnosis, reads from the Enterobacteriaceae (Salmonella’s parent family) accounted for a median of 10.1% of daily reads during the diarrheal illness and peaked at 29.3% of reads on day 159 (Additional file 5). Over the entire year, reads from the Enterobacteriaceae accounted for a median of 0.004% of each day’s reads. Subject B did not use antibiotics during the diarrheal episode.
The two subjects had qualitatively different responses to perturbation. To summarize the broad effects of disturbance across thousands of microbial taxa, we grouped OTUs into a limited number of clusters by their abundance across Subject A’s travel period (Methods). Subject A’s travel strongly perturbed community structure up to the phylum level, coinciding with marked increases and decreases in Bacteroidetes- and Firmicutes-rich clusters, respectively (Figure 3A,B); ultimately, the Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes ratio increased from 0.37 (pre-travel) to 0.71 (mid travel, days 90 to 103; Additional file 6). Despite these changes in species abundance, there was not a large gain or loss of bacterial species (Figure 3C). Of the 352 OTUs present in 95% of samples collected prior to travel, 322 (91%) had non-zero median abundances during the stable travel period. Similarly, of the 359 OTUs present mid-travel, 329 (92%) had non-zero median abundances prior to travel. The emergence of a Proteobacteria-rich cluster of bacteria coincident with diarrhea was a notable exception to the trend of shared species composition before and during travel (Figure 3B), but these species did not persist following return from travel. Thus, dominant post-travel bacterial species were already in place before Subject A’s return.
By contrast, clustering Subject B’s gut microbiota across Salmonella infection revealed colonization of new species and the reduction of many commensal species below the sequencing detection limit (Figure 3G). Following infection, OTUs that previously accounted for 44% of pre-infection reads (Cluster 4) made up <1% of reads, while OTUs accounting for only 15% of pre-infection reads (Cluster 7) expanded to represent 65% of post-infection reads (Figure 3F). Enteric infection in Subject B also affected the presence and absence of common pre-infection OTUs. Of the 202 OTUs found in 95% of samples prior to infection, 112 (55%) had a median value of 0 following infection and 28 (13.9%) were not observed again. New OTUs appeared after infection, as 17 (14.7%) of the 116 OTUs found in 95% of post-infection samples had zero median abundance prior to infection. However, these new taxa account for just 1.3% of post-infection reads, indicating that collapses in OTU abundance following enteric infection were primarily compensated for by increased abundances of already present OTUs.
To understand the mechanisms underlying subjects’ departure from their initial microbiota states, we examined the reversibility of each perturbation in the context of recent theories of microbiome ecology. It has been hypothesized that new microbial community states are reached when disturbances either change gut environmental parameters, altering the presence or absence of equilibrium points on a state landscape, or when they alter gut microbiota themselves, shifting communities between fixed equilibria (Figure 3D,H) [9, 13, 25]. Under the environmental disturbance model, reversal of habitat perturbation will restore the original microbiota state. Under the community disturbance model, microbiota can persist in new stable states after the perturbation abates. We investigated which of these models were best supported by community recovery dynamics.
The gut microbiota shift associated with Subject A’s travel reversed upon return home, consistent with the environmental disturbance model of microbiome state transition (Figure 3D). Subject A’s gut microbiota reverted to its pre-travel state in roughly 14 days according to a distance-based analysis (Additional file 7). The reversible state change may have resulted in part from Subject A’s temporary adoption of a regional diet while living abroad. Subject A resumed a normal eating pattern upon returning home, as none of the subject’s tracked dietary variables exhibited significant differences between the months preceding and following travel (q >0.05, Mann–Whitney U test). A microbiota disturbance model driven by regional diet is supported by recent cross-sectional studies, which hypothesize that varying nutritional profiles of non-Western and Western diets promote distinct microbiota in the developed and developing world [26, 27]. Exposure to novel bacteria, including possibly diarrheal pathogens, may have also contributed to Subject A’s altered microbiota. However, elevated beta-diversity scores among samples taken after moving abroad, but before the onset of frank illness, suggests a role for geographic change in altering Subject A’s microbiota (Additional file 7).
In contrast, Subject B’s gut microbiota did not return to its pre-infection state, which is consistent with the community disturbance model (Figure 3H). Indeed, Salmonella is known to induce an inflammatory response in the host, which disturbs commensal species and may facilitate pathogen colonization [28]. Subject B’s microbiota persisted in its altered state for the remaining 3 months the subject collected regular fecal samples (Figure 2B).
What forces might enable Subject B’s post-infection gut microbiota to persist? One possibility is that Subject B’s diet changed after infection. However, we did not observe significant changes among Subject B’s dietary variables in the month following infection relative to the month preceding infection (q >0.05, Mann–Whitney U test). An alternative explanation is that the bacterial species lost were replaced by competitors. To test this hypothesis, we reasoned that closely related taxa are likely to share ecological traits [29]. Therefore, we tested whether the bacteria gained (Cluster 7) and lost (Cluster 4) after infection exhibited phylogenetic grouping.
The bacterial taxa that expanded in Subject B after infection were indeed closely related to the taxa that were lost, indicating a conservation of function rather than species following infection. We found that taxa from both clusters were primarily associated with a single clade of Firmicutes (Figure 4; P <0.001, Fisher’s Exact Test). The increase in Cluster 7 taxa from the Firmicutes subtree after enteric infection (6.9% to 40.1% of reads) nearly mirrored the decline in Cluster 4 taxa from the same subtree (37.2% of reads to 0.04%). Overall, Cluster 4 and 7 taxa from this subtree accounted for 44.1% of reads prior to infection and 40.2% of reads after infection. Thus, we hypothesize that functional stability can be preserved even when compositional stability is lost.
Lifestyle choices can affect select microbial taxa on daily timescales
We only identified two host experiences that triggered large shifts from stable points, but we found multiple host health and behavior factors that contributed to fluctuations around stable points. Most host factors we tracked behaved randomly over time (Additional file 8), supporting the notion that normal adult lifestyles present microbiota with an idiosyncratic array of daily perturbations. We developed a novel analysis pipeline to identify putative causal links between host factors and microbial time series (Methods). This analysis was designed conservatively and included several steps aimed at filtering out false positive interactions. The pipeline also did not include dates spanning travel or infection events, and it relied on OTU clusters distinct from the ones assembled for the major perturbation analyses. Pipeline development focused on Subject A’s time series because that subject more densely collected metadata than Subject B.
Our analysis identified a subset of gut and salivary OTUs sensitive to host diet and behavior in Subject A (q <0.05, Spearman correlation; Table 1 and Additional files 9, 10, 11). Of the 28 groups of correlations we identified, 25 involved bacterial abundance shifts 1 day after a change in host health or behavior. One notable exception to this pattern is a putative relationship between salivary taxa and host exercise forward in time, which is likely to be a false positive result. For Subject A’s salivary microbiota, we observed flossing to be associated with reduced concentrations of Streptococcus species, including the dental pathogen S. mutans in the saliva. Flossing has previously been shown to lower S. mutans oral load [30]. Unexpectedly, we found body fat and weight negatively correlated with a cluster of oral bacteria. One possible reason for this link is that subject hydration affects body fat measurements on the scales we distributed to subjects, as well as the flow rate, protein levels, and osmolarity of saliva [31]. Changes to these environmental variables may in turn impede the growth of select oral microbes.
Table 1.
Body site | Lag (days) | Host factor | Representative OTUs (n) | ρ | Pvalue | Abun. (%) | Cluster ID | Total OTUs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Subject A Gut | 0 | Stool: Hardness | Eggerthella/Clostridium (11) | -0.30 | 1.0E-06 | 0.2144 | 10 | 23 |
0 | Stool: Time Of Day | Eggerthella/Clostridium (11) | 0.27 | 7.4E-06 | 0.2144 | 10 | 23 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Clostridium (6) | -0.38 | 7.4E-06 | 0.0442 | 6 | 9 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Ruminococcaceae/F. prausnitzii (4) | -0.44 | 1.1E-07 | 0.3745 | 8 | 8 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Eggerthella/Clostridium (11) | -0.39 | 3.3E-06 | 0.2144 | 10 | 23 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Ruminococcus/R. gnavus/Clostridium (4) | -0.51 | 2.9E-10 | 0.5479 | 51 | 12 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Ruminococcus/R. gnavus/Clostridium (5) | -0.51 | 3.8E-10 | 0.3495 | 52 | 7 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Blautia (3) | -0.38 | 7.6E-06 | 0.0346 | 53 | 3 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Bifidobacteriales (13) | 0.36 | 1.6E-05 | 6.0786 | 86 | 13 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Coprococcus (8) | 0.44 | 7.2E-08 | 4.2192 | 89 | 12 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Clostridium (1) | -0.42 | 4.6E-07 | 0.0716 | 111 | 1 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Ruminococcus/R. gnavus/Clostridium (6) | -0.44 | 1.2E-07 | 2.0690 | 118 | 14 | |
1 | Nutrition: Fiber | Roseburia/E. rectale (30) | 0.37 | 8.4E-06 | 5.0446 | 127 | 40 | |
1 | Food: OrangeJuice | Clostridium (1) | 0.28 | 4.7E-06 | 0.0457 | 106 | 2 | |
1 | Food: BreakfastBar | Ruminococcus/R. gnavus/Clostridium (4) | -0.27 | 6.6E-06 | 0.5479 | 51 | 12 | |
1 | Food: BreakfastBar | Ruminococcus/R. gnavus/Clostridium (5) | -0.40 | 2.9E-11 | 0.3495 | 52 | 7 | |
1 | Food: BreakfastBar | Bifidobacteriales (13) | 0.27 | 9.5E-06 | 6.0786 | 86 | 13 | |
1 | Food: BreakfastBar | Clostridium (1) | -0.43 | 5.3E-13 | 0.0716 | 111 | 1 | |
1 | Food: Yogurt | Bifidobacteriales (2) | 0.45 | 2.7E-14 | 0.0069 | 85 | 2 | |
1 | Food: Fruits: Fresh | Clostridiales (4) | -0.27 | 1.1E-05 | 0.1866 | 120 | 9 | |
1 | Food: Fruits: Citrus | Ruminococcaceae/F. prausnitzii (4) | 0.36 | 1.7E-09 | 1.7152 | 107 | 4 | |
1 | Food: Soup | Clostridiales (1) | -0.25 | 3.3E-05 | 0.0014 | 62 | 2 | |
1 | Food: Soup | Blautia (21) | -0.26 | 2.4E-05 | 3.8126 | 68 | 31 | |
1 | Food: Soup: Other | Clostridiales (1) | -0.27 | 1.3E-05 | 0.0014 | 62 | 2 | |
1 | Food: Soup: Other | Blautia (21) | -0.28 | 4.2E-06 | 3.8126 | 68 | 31 | |
Subject A Saliva | -7 | Exercise: TookPlace | S. mutans/S. sanguinis (2) | -0.28 | 1.6E-05 | 0.0142 | 21 | 2 |
1 | OralCare: Flossing | S. mutans/S. sanguinis (2) | -0.30 | 2.5E-06 | 0.0142 | 21 | 2 | |
1 | Fitness: BodyFat | Prevotella (4) | -0.36 | 1.4E-06 | 1.5761 | 35 | 14 |
Non-parametric statistics were used to identify metadata variables significantly correlated with clustered OTUs lagged forward or backwards in time (q <0.05, Spearman correlation). Representative taxonomic names from each cluster are shown along with the percentage of overall reads accounted for by each OTU cluster (‘Abundance’). Redundant correlations (for example, yogurt subtypes associated with the same OTU cluster) are shown in Additional file 9, and a full list of taxa associated with each cluster can be found in Additional files 10 and 11. We excluded Subject A’s travel period and Subject B’s post-infection period from metadata correlation analysis. No significant correlations were found among Subject B’s microbiota and metadata.
In Subject A’s gut, fiber-rich foods positively correlated with next-day abundances of clusters comprising more than 15% of total community reads. These clusters were enriched for Bifidobacteria, Roseburia, and Eubacterium rectale species, which previous studies have identified as fiber-sensitive [15, 32–34]. Four Clostridiales OTUs, including Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, were positively correlated with eating citrus. F. prausnitzii is notable for its potential therapeutic role in colitis [35] and is also known to grow on pectin [36], a carbohydrate found in citrus fruit [37]. We also detected a positive correlation between consuming yogurt and Bifidobacteriales, which are a common live culture in yogurts.
Using the same gut and salivary OTU clusters tested for metadata interactions, we also explored potential links between gut and saliva microbiota themselves. Healthy humans swallow between 1 L and 1.5 L of saliva daily, making it feasible that oral microbiota are regularly introduced into the digestive tract [38]. Nevertheless, we did not observe any significant temporal correlations between Subject A’s gut and salivary OTU clusters across lag periods ranging from -7 to +7 days (q <0.01, Spearman correlation). Thus, our dataset did not support short-term temporal interactions between gut and salivary microbiota within an individual.
Conclusions
Despite the relationships inferred above, it is perhaps surprising that given the multiple of tracked host variables, we did not observe more correlations between host behavior and the microbiota. For example, we did not observe extensive links between gut microbiota and variables like sleep, exercise, or mood. These findings suggest that future longitudinal studies of human microbiota will not have to exhaustively control for host behavior, as a wide range of lifestyle attributes are unlikely to broadly disrupt individuals’ microbiota. We note, however, that false negative interactions in this study may have been due to our conservative analysis pipeline, which we biased against inferring false positive correlations. It is also possible that subjects’ self-awareness due to daily tracking skewed our results. To guard against this outcome, we instructed subjects not to deviate from their normal behavior during the study. Moreover, subjects were not aware of their microbial data as the study progressed. Lastly, even though we tracked subjects closely, the range of health and behavioral choices we measured was limited to the individual choices of only two people over 1 year; larger and longer observational studies may cover a broader range of human behaviors and account for temporal effects, like seasonality.
The apparent robustness of human microbiota to many host actions emphasizes the importance of the select host factors that could be linked to microbial dynamics. Notably, two linked host factors, fiber intake and host geography, are thought to influence differences in gut microbiota observed between the Western and developing world. We found that bacteria sensitive to fiber intake could respond to diet shifts within a single day, which is consistent with the hypothesis that fiber plays a major role in shaping gut microbiota [14, 26, 27]. However, a gut microbe commonly found in the developing world and linked to fiber intake, Prevotella, did not correlate with subject fiber consumption in our study. In support of the hypothesis that geography plays an important role in shaping gut microbiota [26], we observed that travel to the developing world provided the largest impact to the gut microbiota of one subject over the course of 1 year. Once again, however, this microbiota shift was not linked to changes in the abundance of Prevotella. Instead, travel-related changes were associated with abundance changes among already-present bacteria, emphasizing the durability of gut microbial associations with their host [6].
The strength of microbial associations with a host does appear limited though, as we find that a Salmonella infection led to persistent declines among more than half of commensal bacterial taxa. This time series represents one of the first longitudinal observations of an enteric bacterial infection in a human adult that includes subject measurements before illness, and it raises key questions for future study. Is post-infection recovery driven by ecological forces such as migration rates and competitive exclusion, or does the host play an active role in rebuilding a stable ecosystem? If the host exerts top-down control of the microbiome, how might it be achieved? Possible mechanisms include pathogen-driven inflammation that ultimately affects tolerance to commensal bacteria [39]. Finally, what are the functional roles carried out by different bacterial taxa leading to their robustness in the face of species turnover, and why might members of certain phyla, like the Firmicutes, be more susceptible to local extinction? Additional studies of human microbiota response to infection are needed to address these questions and should help elucidate the host and ecological forces governing the dynamics of human-associated microbial communities.
Methods
Ethical review
We obtained written informed consent from both subjects enrolled in the study. This study was approved by the MIT Committee on the Use of Humans as Experimental Subjects (Study #0903003155) and complied with the Helsinki Declaration.
Microbial sampling
Subject A collected gut microbiota samples between days 0 and 364 of the study and saliva microbiota samples between days 26 and 364. Subject B primarily collected gut microbiota samples between study days 0 and 252. Gut microbiota were sampled non-invasively using fecal collection. Stool samples were taken in duplicate by coring out feces with inverted sterile 1 mL pipette tips. These tips were then deposited in 15 mL Falcon tubes. Saliva was sampled by 10 s of oral rinsing with 10 mL of sterile phosphate-buffered saline and also stored in 15 mL Falcon tubes. Samples collected at home were stored temporarily at -20°C until transport to the laboratory, where they were then stored in -80°C freezers. Subject A’s samples collected abroad were stored at -20°C, shipped to the United States on dry ice, and then stored at -80°C.
DNA extraction
We used the QIAamp DNA Stool Mini Kit (Qiagen) and a modified version of its protocol to isolate bacterial DNA from fecal and saliva samples. For stool, we included a bead-beating step at the beginning of DNA extraction, in order to increase cell lysis. First, we used a chilled centrifuge to remove frozen stool cores from the 1 mL pipette tips (30 s at 3,000 g and 4°C). Once samples thawed to 20°C, we added 700 μL of buffer ASL per 100 mg of stool. Next, we used a digital vortex (VWR) and 2 mL of garnet beads (MoBio Laboratories) to break apart stool samples (10 s at 3,000 rpm). We then bead-beat the suspended stool with a Vortex Genie2 (MoBio Laboratories) and 2 mL of 0.1 mm glass beads (MoBio Laboratories) for 10 min at the setting ‘10’, in order to physically lyse cells. Each tube was subsequently heated at 95°C for 6 min to lyse remaining unbroken cells. Afterwards, the Qiagen InhibitEX tablet was added and we followed the QIAamp kit protocol.
For saliva, we initially captured bacterial cells from saliva samples using a 0.22 μm filter (Millipore) and a syringe to apply positive pressure. We placed these filters into 180 μL of lysis buffer (without lysozyme) and bead-beat on a Mini-beadbeater (Biospec products) with 0.1 mm glass beads for 1 min at room temperature and at maximum speed. Next, we added another 180 μL lysis buffer with 40 mg/mL lysozyme and spun for 1 h at 450 rpm and 37°C. Since filtered saliva likely contains fewer PCR inhibitors than stool, we skipped addition of the Qiagen InhibitEX tablet and then followed the remainder of the QIAamp kit protocol.
DNA sequencing
We used the V4 region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene subunit to identify bacteria in a culture-independent manner. Extracted DNA was amplified using custom barcoded primers and sequenced with paired-end 100 bp reads on an Illumina GAIIx according to a previously published protocol [19].
OTU picking
We used the QIIME analysis pipeline (v1.3) to process raw DNA reads into OTU counts [20]. We wrote a Python script to format raw sequence files for input into QIIME. We used the split_libraries_illumina.py QIIME script to initially process reads. To minimize the effects of sequencing errors, we retained only high-quality, full-length reads (max_bad_run_length was set to 0 and the min_per_read_length was assigned to 101). We next used the script parallel_pick_otus_uclust_ref.py to pick OTUs; this script relies on UCLUST [40], which can perform gapped alignments against reference sequences. We used as a reference a set of OTUs assembled at 97% similarity from the Greengenes database [41] (constructed by the nested_gg_workflow.py QiimeUtils script on 4 Feb 2011 [20]). We trimmed the reference FASTA file to span only the 16S region sequenced by our primers.
Sample quality control
We used pairwise similarity between samples to identify, and subsequently correct or exclude cases of mislabeling or mishandling that may have occurred in our sample processing pipeline. Based on this analysis, we excluded Subject B gut samples from days 229 and 230, which showed an unexpected similarity to those of Subject A. We also excluded a subset of gut samples stored in either ethanol (Subject A gut days 75 and 76) or RNAlater (Subject A gut days 258 to 270) prior to DNA extraction. We chose not to include these samples in our analysis since their storage protocol differed from other samples and could introduce a bias in our results. Finally, samples with unusually low read counts (<10,000) were excluded from further analysis.
Host metadata
We collected metadata chronicling host health and behavior using iOS devices. We modified a database iOS app (TapForms) to facilitate recording subjects’ daily health and behavior across 13 metadata categories: ailments, bowel movements, daily notes, diet, exercise, fitness, location change, medication, mood, oral hygiene, sleep, urination, and vitamin intake (described in more detail in Additional file 12). At the beginning of the study, subjects were familiarized with the TapForms app and instructed to carry their iOS devices at all times. We asked subjects to record daily health markers and actions relevant to the metadata categories. We then used a custom Python script to parse the TapForms SQL database and generate metadata time series for correlation with OTUs. A template of the TapForms forms used in this study can be downloaded and installed from the GitHub repository [42].
Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) stationarity testing
We used the ADF test [22] to determine if and when microbial taxa were at equilibrium. We employed the ADF test implemented in the Statsmodels Python module [43]. This method (‘adfuller’) was run on time series mean-centered in log10-space and was called with regression parameters of no constant and no trend (regression = ‘nc’). The number of lags was chosen using the t-statistic (autolag = ‘t-stat’). Test results were compiled for the 100 most abundant OTUs in each microbial community. We chose not to include less-abundant OTUs in these analyses because the dynamics of OTUs near our detection limit are more likely to be noisy. We used the P-test [44] implemented in PyCogent [45] (set to 1,000 permutations and the ‘corrected’ P value) to measure the significance of non-stationary OTU clustering on the reference Greengenes 16S rRNA tree.
Host factor/OTU correlation detection
We constructed a time series analysis pipeline to detect relationships between host metadata and the microbiota. Our pipeline integrated steps to account for numerical artifacts associated with microbiota studies, low abundance OTUs, auto-correlated time series, and to reduce multiple hypothesis testing (Additional file 13). We designed several of these steps to avoid finding spurious correlations between variables, which can commonly occur in time series analysis [46, 47]. To facilitate understanding novel components of our pipeline, we have provided online demonstrations and Python code for time series normalization [48] and detrending auto-correlated time series [49].
Normalization
Sequencing-based 16S rRNA surveys are usually normalized by converting OTU sequence counts into fractional abundances for each sample. However, this standard technique leads to what is known as compositional effects [50], and may cause false relationships between OTUs, or between OTUs and metadata. For example, suppose a host switches to a higher fiber diet, which causes fiber-sensitive gut bacteria to multiply, but does not affect fiber-independent OTUs. Standard normalization will suggest the diet shift leads to more fiber-sensitive bacteria and fewer fiber-independent bacteria because the latter group comprises a smaller fraction of the post-diet shift bacterial community. One might then falsely conclude that fiber actively inhibits fiber-independent OTUs when in fact those OTUs do not respond to changes in the nutrient’s availability.
To avoid normalization artifacts when comparing host metadata and microbiota, we developed a novel normalization technique that does not assume sample reads sum to the same fixed value (see subsection below, Comparison to SparCC, for more details on how this method differs from our previous work on microbiota correlation). The method we introduce here assumes at least half of the OTUs held in common between two communities do not change in abundance. We then use statistics robust to the effect of outliers to estimate the median OTU fold-change between communities and rescale all OTUs by that value (Additional file 14). Mathematically, we model OTUs in two samples x (the observed) and y (the reference) as yi = mixi and find the median mi, which we call m. We then rescale all xi by m. Unlike the standard normalization, our technique does not infer abundance changes in all OTUs when only a small number actually change. Moreover, since our method does not require that each samples’ reads sum to the same value, we can compare total bacterial load between samples.
Our regression technique is implemented as follows. First, we normalized time points in the standard manner so that all fractional OTU abundances each day sum to 1. Second, we restricted our analysis to a subset of highly-abundant OTUs, since regularly undetected OTUs will have a zero or undefined mi. We then sorted OTUs by abundance and selected the first set of OTUs that accounted for 90% of median daily reads. Third, we randomly chose time points to normalize. We normalized each time point to a reference community (rather than a single time point), to minimize the effects of anomalous time points during normalization. We did not use the same reference community for each time point since multiple microbiota states may exist in a single time series (for example, Subject B before and after diarrheal infection). Rather, we computed a reference for each sample based on other time points with similar community structure. We used a weighted median across all time points to compute reference OTU values, where we set time point weights to be (1 - j)2 and j was the pairwise JSD score to the sample being normalized. Our OTU abundance data appeared heteroscedastic, meaning that the variance of more abundant OTUs was higher than the variance of less abundant OTUs. We applied a common solution to this problem, which was to solve for mi in log-space. Fourth, we discarded time points with an uncertain estimate of m (median(|yi - mxi|) > 0.4).
Because no gold standard dataset matches sequencing-base 16S surveys to overall bacterial load in the human gut, we used simulated data to test our normalization scheme. We modeled synthetic microbial communities on microbiota observed in our experiments. Each OTU in our synthetic community behaved according to an Ornstein-Uhlenbeck (OU) process, which can be thought of as a random-walk modified to mean-revert over time. We simulated an OU process using the following function [51], where Si is OTU abundance at time i, λ describes how quickly the process returns to the mean, μ is the mean, σ the average magnitude of fluctuations, and δ is the time between simulation steps (we set to 1):
We calculated maximum likelihood OU parameters for 3,383 OTUs drawn from Subject B’s gut time series using the following system of equations [51]:
To test our normalization technique in the face of microbiota perturbations, we simulated two OU processes for each OTU: one calibrated using Subject B’s pre-infection samples and one using post-infection samples. We joined these processes (each with 50 time points) into a single time series (100 time points). Lastly, we simulated daily microbiota surveys by randomly sampling OTUs according to their fractional abundance at each time point. We randomly chose total read counts from the set of read counts observed in Subject B’s microbiota time series.
Our robust regression accurately normalized the simulated time series. We evaluated our method by first tracking changes in bacterial load over time within our simulated communities. We compared these changes to bacterial load predictions from normalized time series of synthetic sequencing runs. We note that the standard normalization approach cannot infer bacterial load changes, since it predicts each samples’ OTU abundances sum to the same value. Over four separate synthetic datasets, the Spearman correlation between simulated bacterial loads and our inferred bacterial loads was never less than 0.58 (all P values ≤1.37e-10; Additional file 15), even after accounting for the autocorrelated nature of total bacterial load (see section below on Autocorrelation elimination).
Comparison to SparCC
Surveys of 16S rRNA are usually treated as fractional abundances, rather than absolute ones. This traditional approach leads to read totals that sum to 1, meaning fractions cannot change independently of each other; this in turn could lead to false relationships between OTUs, or between OTUs and metadata [52]. We have previously developed a method, termed SparCC, for inferring correlations between OTU from genomic survey data [50]. However, SparCC applies to independent samples, while this study is concerned with autocorrelated time series. Moreover, in this study we are interested in inferring correlations between OTUs and metadata, whereas SparCC focuses solely on inter-OTU correlations. We therefore introduced here a new method for normalizing 16S rRNA time series, as well as finding metadata-OTU correlations.
OTU filtering
We only tested relationships between common OTUs (present in at least half of a given period’s samples) and host metadata. Focusing on common OTUs increased the likelihood we detected true interactions, since we could analyze shifts in bacterial abundance and not simply OTU presence or absence. Moreover, filtering out OTUs reduced the total number of statistical tests we performed and thus reduced the burden of multiple hypothesis testing. After filtering, 750 OTUs, 621 OTUs, and 289 OTUs remained from Subject A’s gut, Subject B’s gut, and Subject A’s salivary microbiota time series, respectively.
Autocorrelation elimination
Autocorrelated processes occur when measurements taken at one time point are correlated with measurements at previous or future time points. For example, subjects’ weights in this study are autocorrelated, as their weight on a given day is likely to be highly similar to their weight the previous day. This poses a challenge for finding statistical relationships between host metadata and their microbiota, because it is well-known in time series analysis that cross-correlations between autocorrelated variables have unreliable P values [46, 47]. To avoid this problem, we fitted time series models to each variable and computed cross-correlations on the differences (residuals) between modeled trends and the observed data [47]. For the microbial time series, we use the R (ver. 2.15.1) ‘forecast’ package to fit standard time series models known as autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) models [53]. ARIMA models are commonly used tools in econometrics and time series analysis to model longitudinal data [46]. We fit ARIMA parameters using the ‘auto.arima’ function with a maximum p of 2, a maximum q of 2, and a d of either 0 or 1. We chose which value of d to use by minimizing a common measure of model complexity (Bayesian information criterion). We applied a similar procedure to the host metadata, except in the case of variables whose behavior appeared binary (that is, in at least 75% of the time series, the variable had a value of zero). Because ARIMA models may not be appropriate for non-continuous time series [54], we used a logistic regression model designed for binary longitudinal data (the R ‘bild’ package [55]). We calculated two kinds of serial dependence models (first-order and second-order) for each metadata variable and again picked the one that minimized a measure of model complexity (the Akaike information criterion). In all cases, if the autocorrelation of the residual time series was higher than the autocorrelation of the original time series itself, we discarded the residual series and worked only on the original data.
Clustering
To further reduce the number of tested microbial and metadata interactions, we clustered OTUs sharing similar temporal dynamics. We computed pairwise distances between OTUs as 1-ρ, where ρ was the Spearman correlation (‘rcorr’ function in the R ‘hmisc’ package [56]) between the OTUs’ time series. We rounded negative distances up to 0. We next passed the OTU distance matrix to the ‘linkage’ function in the SciPy [57] (ver. 10.1) hierarchical clustering package (scipy.cluster.hierarchy). We used the ‘weighted’ linkage method to compute OTU clustering. Cluster assignments were retrieved using the ‘fcluster’ function with the clustering criterion set to ‘distance’ and a clustering threshold of 80% of the maximum distance between nodes in the linkage matrix. This pipeline produced 138 clusters for Subject A’s gut time series, 90 clusters for Subject B’s gut time series, and 46 clusters for Subject A’s salivary time series (Additional file 16). We modeled cluster dynamics using the median OTU value at each time point over all the OTUs within the cluster. Lastly, to again guard against autocorrelations in the cluster time series, we fit ARIMA models to each cluster and computed residual time series.
Correlation
We used rank-based non-parametric statistics to detect correlations between time series of detrended OTU clusters and detrended metadata. We lagged the cluster time series between -7 and +7 days, relative to the metadata, and computed Spearman correlations again using the ‘rcorr’ function in the R ‘hmisc’ package. Microbial or metadata variables with high autocorrelation (P <0.01) were excluded from analysis. We estimated false discovery rates separately for a given lag and body site (‘fdrtool’ R package [58]). As a final check for spurious cross-correlations [47], we excluded interactions that when regressed against each other, exhibited auto-correlated errors (P <0.01, Durbin-Watson test [59]).
Disturbance analyses
To simplify our analysis of how OTUs responded to prolonged travel abroad or enteric infection, we constructed a clustering pipeline similar to the one used in our host-factor/microbiota correlation testing. We inputted standardly normalized time series into this pipeline because our robust regression-based normalization routine could not confidently infer scaling factors during both Subject A and B’s diarrheal illnesses. We also used a slightly more permissive clustering threshold than the previous section (90% of the maximum distance between nodes in the linkage matrix) because we wanted to study broad bacterial trends and not more minor OTU dynamical patterns. This clustering pipeline yielded 11 OTU clusters for both subjects’ time series (Additional file 17).
We used Fischer’s exact test (SciPy.stats) to determine if clustered OTUs shared significant phylogenetic similarity. We used the Greengenes 16S tree from OTU picking as our reference phylogeny and the PyCogent library [45] to analyze this tree. Closely-related taxa with similar temporal dynamics could reflect sequencing errors associated with a single strain; this artifact could in turn cause falsely-significant phylogenetic grouping. To control for such errors, we collapsed subtrees of OTUs sharing the same cluster assignment and leaf pairwise distances less than 0.2 down to a single leaf. We then used the collapsed reference tree to construct a 2X2 contingency table with rows counting how many OTUs were part of, or excluded from, a given set of clusters and columns counting how many OTUs were within, or outside of, a given subtree.
Data availability
The read data for all samples have been deposited in the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) under the nucleotide accession number ERP006059. Subject A’s nutritional metadata (that is, estimated daily intake of calories, total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, protein, sodium, carbohydrates, fiber, sugars, and calcium) are provided under the group accession number SAMEG179160 and can also be found in Additional file 18. For other metadata requests, please contact the corresponding author.
Electronic supplementary material
Acknowledgements
We thank Donna Berg-Lyons, Noah Fierer, and Rob Knight for PCR and pooling, Jessica Hoisington-Lopez and Jeffrey I. Gordon for DNA sequencing, and Gail Ackermann, Adam Robbins-Pianka, and Emily TerAvest for assistance with depositing sequences online. We gratefully acknowledge Peter Turnbaugh, Corinne Maurice, Jeffrey Moffitt, Arvind Subramaniam, Jesse Shapiro, and members of the Alm lab for helpful discussions. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0821391. LAD was supported in part by a MIT Whitaker Health Sciences Fund Fellowship. This work was also supported in part by a grant from the Crohns and Colitis Foundation of America to JIG and RK.
Abbreviations
- ADF
Augmented Dickey-Fuller
- ARIMA
autoregressive integrated moving average
- EBI
European Bioinformatics Institute
- ENA
European Nucleotide Archive
- GAIIx
Genome Analyzer IIx
- JSD
Jensen-Shannon distance
- LOESS
LOcal regrESSion
- OTU
operational taxonomic unit
- OU
Ornstein-Uhlenbeck
- QIIME
Quantitative Insights into Microbial Ecology
- rRNA
ribosomal RNA
- SQL
Structured query language.
Footnotes
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
LAD and EJA designed the study. ACM, MICB, MCB, and AP processed samples and organized DNA sequencing. LAD, JF, and EJA analyzed the data. LAD, SEE, and EJA prepared the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Contributor Information
Lawrence A David, Email: l.d@duke.edu.
Arne C Materna, Email: amaterna@clcbio.com.
Jonathan Friedman, Email: yonatanf@mit.edu.
Maria I Campos-Baptista, Email: baptista@mit.edu.
Matthew C Blackburn, Email: matthew.blackburn@epfl.ch.
Allison Perrotta, Email: aperrott@mit.edu.
Susan E Erdman, Email: serdman@mit.edu.
Eric J Alm, Email: ejalm@mit.edu.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The read data for all samples have been deposited in the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) under the nucleotide accession number ERP006059. Subject A’s nutritional metadata (that is, estimated daily intake of calories, total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, protein, sodium, carbohydrates, fiber, sugars, and calcium) are provided under the group accession number SAMEG179160 and can also be found in Additional file 18. For other metadata requests, please contact the corresponding author.