Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process

Publication Date:
2018-03-09
Publisher:
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Electronic ISSN:
2375-2548
Topics:
Natural Sciences in General
Published by:
_version_ 1836398837616345088
autor Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
beschreibung Given the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized populations and its association with the skin microbiome, we questioned how the skin microbiome differed depending on the degree of urbanization. Skin microbiomes of 231 healthy subjects in five large cities in China varied mainly with environment and socioeconomic status of the cities in question. The differences among microbiomes could be explained by the predominantly niche-based assembly of microbial communities, which was supported by a dominance test, β-null deviation, and edge-length abundance distribution. Networks among microbes in larger cities were more fragile, which may contribute to the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized environments. These results suggest that microbial ecological theory can provide a framework for understanding crucial health-associated features of the human microbiome.
citation_standardnr 6200794
datenlieferant ipn_articles
feed_id 228416
feed_publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
feed_publisher_url http://www.aaas.org/
insertion_date 2018-03-09
journaleissn 2375-2548
publikationsjahr_anzeige 2018
publikationsjahr_facette 2018
publikationsjahr_intervall 7984:2015-2019
publikationsjahr_sort 2018
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
quelle Science Advances
relation http://advances.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/e1701581?rss=1
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
shingle_author_2 Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
shingle_author_3 Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
shingle_author_4 Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
shingle_catch_all_1 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
Given the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized populations and its association with the skin microbiome, we questioned how the skin microbiome differed depending on the degree of urbanization. Skin microbiomes of 231 healthy subjects in five large cities in China varied mainly with environment and socioeconomic status of the cities in question. The differences among microbiomes could be explained by the predominantly niche-based assembly of microbial communities, which was supported by a dominance test, β-null deviation, and edge-length abundance distribution. Networks among microbes in larger cities were more fragile, which may contribute to the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized environments. These results suggest that microbial ecological theory can provide a framework for understanding crucial health-associated features of the human microbiome.
Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
2375-2548
23752548
shingle_catch_all_2 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
Given the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized populations and its association with the skin microbiome, we questioned how the skin microbiome differed depending on the degree of urbanization. Skin microbiomes of 231 healthy subjects in five large cities in China varied mainly with environment and socioeconomic status of the cities in question. The differences among microbiomes could be explained by the predominantly niche-based assembly of microbial communities, which was supported by a dominance test, β-null deviation, and edge-length abundance distribution. Networks among microbes in larger cities were more fragile, which may contribute to the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized environments. These results suggest that microbial ecological theory can provide a framework for understanding crucial health-associated features of the human microbiome.
Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
2375-2548
23752548
shingle_catch_all_3 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
Given the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized populations and its association with the skin microbiome, we questioned how the skin microbiome differed depending on the degree of urbanization. Skin microbiomes of 231 healthy subjects in five large cities in China varied mainly with environment and socioeconomic status of the cities in question. The differences among microbiomes could be explained by the predominantly niche-based assembly of microbial communities, which was supported by a dominance test, β-null deviation, and edge-length abundance distribution. Networks among microbes in larger cities were more fragile, which may contribute to the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized environments. These results suggest that microbial ecological theory can provide a framework for understanding crucial health-associated features of the human microbiome.
Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
2375-2548
23752548
shingle_catch_all_4 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
Given the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized populations and its association with the skin microbiome, we questioned how the skin microbiome differed depending on the degree of urbanization. Skin microbiomes of 231 healthy subjects in five large cities in China varied mainly with environment and socioeconomic status of the cities in question. The differences among microbiomes could be explained by the predominantly niche-based assembly of microbial communities, which was supported by a dominance test, β-null deviation, and edge-length abundance distribution. Networks among microbes in larger cities were more fragile, which may contribute to the higher incidence of skin diseases in more urbanized environments. These results suggest that microbial ecological theory can provide a framework for understanding crucial health-associated features of the human microbiome.
Kim, H.-J., Kim, H., Kim, J. J., Myeong, N. R., Kim, T., Park, T., Kim, E., Choi, J.-y., Lee, J., An, S., Sul, W. J.
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
2375-2548
23752548
shingle_title_1 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
shingle_title_2 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
shingle_title_3 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
shingle_title_4 Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
timestamp 2025-06-30T23:33:25.743Z
titel Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
titel_suche Fragile skin microbiomes in megacities are assembled by a predominantly niche-based process
topic TA-TD
uid ipn_articles_6200794