Publication Title
mSystems
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-21-2020
Keywords
flux balance analysis; gut microbiome; metagenome; systems biology
Abstract
Compositional changes in the gut microbiota have been associated with a variety of medical conditions such as obesity, Crohn's disease, and diabetes. However, connecting microbial community composition to ecosystem function remains a challenge. Here, we introduce MICOM, a customizable metabolic model of the human gut microbiome. By using a heuristic optimization approach based on L2 regularization, we were able to obtain a unique set of realistic growth rates that corresponded well with observed replication rates. We integrated adjustable dietary and taxon abundance constraints to generate personalized metabolic models for individual metagenomic samples. We applied MICOM to a balanced cohort of metagenomes from 186 people, including a metabolically healthy population and individuals with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Model results showed that individual bacterial genera maintained conserved niche structures across humans, while the community-level production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) was heterogeneous and highly individual specific. Model output revealed complex cross-feeding interactions that would be difficult to measure
Clinical Institute
Digestive Health
Specialty/Research Institute
Institute for Systems Biology
Specialty/Research Institute
Gastroenterology
Included in
Gastroenterology Commons, Genomics Commons, Systems Biology Commons