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The edible plant microbiome: evidence for the occurrence of fruit and vegetable bacteria in the human gut

The edible plant microbiome: evidence for the occurrence of fruit and vegetable bacteria in the human gut
The edible plant microbiome: evidence for the occurrence of fruit and vegetable bacteria in the human gut

Diversity of the gut microbiota is crucial for human health. However, whether fruit and vegetable associated bacteria contribute to overall gut bacterial diversity is still unknown. We reconstructed metagenome-assembled genomes from 156 fruit and vegetable metagenomes to investigate the prevalence of associated bacteria in 2,426 publicly available gut metagenomes. The microbiomes of fresh fruits and vegetables and the human gut are represented by members in common such as Enterobacterales, Burkholderiales, and Lactobacillales. Exposure to bacteria via fruit and vegetable consumption potentially has a beneficial impact on the functional diversity of gut microbiota particularly due to the presence of putative health-promoting genes for the production of vitamin and short-chain fatty acids. In the human gut, they were consistently present, although at a low abundance, approx. 2.2%. Host age, vegetable consumption frequency, and the diversity of plants consumed were drivers favoring a higher proportion. Overall, these results provide one of the primary links between the human microbiome and the environmental microbiome. This study revealed evidence that fruit and vegetable-derived microbes could be found in the human gut and contribute to gut microbiome diversity.

Humans, Vegetables, Plants, Edible, Fruit, Gastrointestinal Microbiome/genetics, Microbiota, Bacteria/genetics
1949-0976
2258565
Wicaksono, Wisnu Adi
61c631cb-96eb-420f-b6a2-23ef92918892
Cernava, Tomislav
a13d65aa-2529-479a-ba90-69ebbc4ba07f
Wassermann, Birgit
9e4f3603-4b01-4474-b98d-95edcca94eee
Abdelfattah, Ahmed
5bb85028-c320-421a-855c-97d56b8bcf53
Soto-Giron, Maria J
2e78dc11-83e3-47fd-ab53-af70c46d6d92
Toledo, Gerardo V
b1bf596a-fafe-4c92-a6e5-ba457fa422dd
Virtanen, Suvi M
e4819621-424a-4cd6-be33-c70310243aa8
Knip, Mikael
caf538c7-d295-493f-be51-c92446618ea2
Hyöty, Heikki
a15e187d-8b35-47f5-8289-b50389a8e025
Berg, Gabriele
5bc6c28c-525d-4f45-b167-5af82c888c6d
Wicaksono, Wisnu Adi
61c631cb-96eb-420f-b6a2-23ef92918892
Cernava, Tomislav
a13d65aa-2529-479a-ba90-69ebbc4ba07f
Wassermann, Birgit
9e4f3603-4b01-4474-b98d-95edcca94eee
Abdelfattah, Ahmed
5bb85028-c320-421a-855c-97d56b8bcf53
Soto-Giron, Maria J
2e78dc11-83e3-47fd-ab53-af70c46d6d92
Toledo, Gerardo V
b1bf596a-fafe-4c92-a6e5-ba457fa422dd
Virtanen, Suvi M
e4819621-424a-4cd6-be33-c70310243aa8
Knip, Mikael
caf538c7-d295-493f-be51-c92446618ea2
Hyöty, Heikki
a15e187d-8b35-47f5-8289-b50389a8e025
Berg, Gabriele
5bc6c28c-525d-4f45-b167-5af82c888c6d

Wicaksono, Wisnu Adi, Cernava, Tomislav, Wassermann, Birgit, Abdelfattah, Ahmed, Soto-Giron, Maria J, Toledo, Gerardo V, Virtanen, Suvi M, Knip, Mikael, Hyöty, Heikki and Berg, Gabriele (2023) The edible plant microbiome: evidence for the occurrence of fruit and vegetable bacteria in the human gut. Gut Microbes, 15 (2), 2258565. (doi:10.1080/19490976.2023.2258565).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Diversity of the gut microbiota is crucial for human health. However, whether fruit and vegetable associated bacteria contribute to overall gut bacterial diversity is still unknown. We reconstructed metagenome-assembled genomes from 156 fruit and vegetable metagenomes to investigate the prevalence of associated bacteria in 2,426 publicly available gut metagenomes. The microbiomes of fresh fruits and vegetables and the human gut are represented by members in common such as Enterobacterales, Burkholderiales, and Lactobacillales. Exposure to bacteria via fruit and vegetable consumption potentially has a beneficial impact on the functional diversity of gut microbiota particularly due to the presence of putative health-promoting genes for the production of vitamin and short-chain fatty acids. In the human gut, they were consistently present, although at a low abundance, approx. 2.2%. Host age, vegetable consumption frequency, and the diversity of plants consumed were drivers favoring a higher proportion. Overall, these results provide one of the primary links between the human microbiome and the environmental microbiome. This study revealed evidence that fruit and vegetable-derived microbes could be found in the human gut and contribute to gut microbiome diversity.

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The edible plant microbiome evidence for the occurrence of fruit and vegetable bacteria in the human gut - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 September 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 September 2023
Published date: 1 December 2023
Keywords: Humans, Vegetables, Plants, Edible, Fruit, Gastrointestinal Microbiome/genetics, Microbiota, Bacteria/genetics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489829
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489829
ISSN: 1949-0976
PURE UUID: c4c4fffe-88b0-4ce6-a78a-34b4afbea8af
ORCID for Tomislav Cernava: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7772-4080

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 May 2024 16:54
Last modified: 04 May 2024 02:05

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Contributors

Author: Wisnu Adi Wicaksono
Author: Tomislav Cernava ORCID iD
Author: Birgit Wassermann
Author: Ahmed Abdelfattah
Author: Maria J Soto-Giron
Author: Gerardo V Toledo
Author: Suvi M Virtanen
Author: Mikael Knip
Author: Heikki Hyöty
Author: Gabriele Berg

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