Article (Scientific journals)
Diversity of key players in the microbial ecosystems of the human body.
Jordan, Ferenc; Lauria, Mario; Scotti, Marco et al.
2015In Scientific Reports, 5, p. 15920
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Abstract :
[en] Coexisting bacteria form various microbial communities in human body parts. In these ecosystems they interact in various ways and the properties of the interaction network can be related to the stability and functional diversity of the local bacterial community. In this study, we analyze the interaction network among bacterial OTUs in 11 locations of the human body. These belong to two major groups. One is the digestive system and the other is the female genital tract. In each local ecosystem we determine the key species, both the ones being in key positions in the interaction network and the ones that dominate by frequency. Beyond identifying the key players and discussing their biological relevance, we also quantify and compare the properties of the 11 networks. The interaction networks of the female genital system and the digestive system show totally different architecture. Both the topological properties and the identity of the key groups differ. Key groups represent four phyla of prokaryotes. Some groups appear in key positions in several locations, while others are assigned only to a single body part. The key groups of the digestive and the genital tracts are totally different.
Disciplines :
Microbiology
Author, co-author :
Jordan, Ferenc
Lauria, Mario
Scotti, Marco
Nguyen, Thanh-Phuong ;  University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Communication (FSTC) > Life Science Research Unit
Praveen, Paurush
Morine, Melissa
Priami, Corrado
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Diversity of key players in the microbial ecosystems of the human body.
Publication date :
November 2015
Journal title :
Scientific Reports
ISSN :
2045-2322
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, London, United Kingdom
Volume :
5
Pages :
15920
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBilu :
since 04 November 2015

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