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Captivity humanizes the primate microbiome
Jonathan B. Clayton, Pajau Vangay, Hu Huang, Tonya Ward, Benjamin Hillmann, Gabriel A. Al‐Ghalith, Dominic A. Travis, Ha Thang Long, Bui Van Tuan, Vo Van Minh, Francis Cabana, Tilo Nadler, Barbara Toddes, Tami Murphy, Kenneth E. Glander
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2016 · ▲ 516 citations
Abstract
The primate gastrointestinal tract is home to trillions of bacteria, whose composition is associated with numerous metabolic, autoimmune, and infectious human diseases. Although there is increasing evidence that modern and Westernized societies are associated with dramatic loss of natural human gut microbiome diversity, the causes and consequences of such loss are challenging to study. Here we use nonhuman primates (NHPs) as a model system for studying the effects of emigration and lifestyle disruption on the human gut microbiome. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing in two model NHP species, we show that although different primate species have distinctive signature microbiota in the wild, in captivity they lose their native microbes and become colonized with Prevotella and Bacteroides, the dominant genera in the modern human gut microbiome. We confirm that captive individuals from eight other NHP species in a different zoo show the same pattern of convergence, and that semicaptive primates housed in a sanctuary represent an intermediate microbiome state between wild and captive. Using deep shotgun sequencing, chemical dietary analysis, and chloroplast relative abundance, we show that decreasing dietary fiber and plant content are associated with the captive primate microbiome. Finally, in a meta-analysis including published human data, we show that captivity has a parallel effect on the NHP gut microbiome to that of Westernization in humans. These results demonstrate that captivity and lifestyle disruption cause primates to lose native microbiota and converge along an axis toward the modern human microbiome.
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- 10.1073/pnas.1521835113
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- 2026-06-13 MST
Cite this
APA
Clayton, J.B., Vangay, P., Huang, H., Ward, T., Hillmann, B., Al‐Ghalith, G.A., Travis, D.A., Long, H.T., Tuan, B.V., Minh, V.V., Cabana, F., Nadler, T., Toddes, B., Murphy, T., Glander, K.E., Johnson, T.J., & Knights, D. (2016). Captivity humanizes the primate microbiome. <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</em>. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1521835113
Vancouver
Clayton JB, Vangay P, Huang H, Ward T, Hillmann B, Al‐Ghalith GA, et al. Captivity humanizes the primate microbiome. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2016. doi:10.1073/pnas.1521835113.
BibTeX
@article{jonathan2016Captiv,
title = {Captivity humanizes the primate microbiome},
author = {Jonathan B. Clayton and Pajau Vangay and Hu Huang and Tonya Ward and Benjamin Hillmann and Gabriel A. Al‐Ghalith and Dominic A. Travis and Ha Thang Long and Bui Van Tuan and Vo Van Minh and Francis Cabana and Tilo Nadler and Barbara Toddes and Tami Murphy and Kenneth E. Glander and Timothy J. Johnson and Dan Knights},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
year = {2016},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1521835113},
}
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