A Core Human Microbiome as Viewed through 16S rRNA Sequence Clusters
Marine Biological Laboratory · Indiana University Bloomington · +2 more institutions
Abstract
We explore the microbiota of 18 body sites in over 200 individuals using sequences amplified V1-V3 and the V3-V5 small subunit ribosomal RNA (16S) hypervariable regions as part of the NIH Common Fund Human Microbiome Project. The body sites with the greatest number of core OTUs, defined as OTUs shared amongst 95% or more of the individuals, were the oral sites (saliva, tongue, cheek, gums, and throat) followed by the nose, stool, and skin, while the vaginal sites had the fewest number of OTUs shared across subjects. We found that commonalities between samples based on taxonomy could sometimes belie variability at the sub-genus OTU level. This was particularly apparent in the mouth where a given genus can be…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 14
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Microbiome
- Species richness
- Hypervariable region
- Genus
- Zoology
- Ribosomal RNA
- Evolutionary biology