<p>The human gut virome is a critical yet understudied component of the microbiome that shapes microbial community structure and host-microbe interactions. However, most existing human gut virome reference databases have been constructed predominantly from populations in high-income countries, resulting in the substantial underrepresentation of African populations. To help address this disparity, we developed the Kenyan Human Gut Virome Catalogue (KHGVC), the first comprehensive human gut virome resource for Kenya and the first country-specific human gut virome catalogue from Africa. Using a standardized viromics pipeline applied to 626 fecal metagenomes spanning infants and adults across three Kenyan counties, we reconstructed 116,968 viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs). Cross-catalogue comparisons revealed extensive novelty where 65.6% of KHGVC’s vOTUs larger than 10&#xa0;kb lacked matches in five major human gut virome databases, and 95% remained unique relative to the Unified Human Gut Virome (UHGV). Temperate bacteriophages accounted for ~ 70% of vOTUs, supporting a major role for lysogeny in gut ecosystem stability. Functional annotation assigned putative roles to ~ 27% of predicted viral proteins, primarily structural and replication-associated functions. Application of KHGVC revealed pronounced age-dependent virome structuring in which infant viromes were less diverse and enriched in <i>Bifidobacterium</i>-infecting phages, including <i>Bifidobacterium longum</i>, whereas adult viromes exhibited greater diversity and expansion of <i>Prevotella</i>-associated phages. Together, the KHGVC substantially expands known human gut viral diversity and provides a foundational reference for Kenyan and African virome research. The KHGVC can be accessed freely through a publicly available interactive web interface (<a href="https://igmr.org/software/kenyavirocat">https://igmr.org/software/kenyavirocat</a>).</p>

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The Kenyan Human Gut Virome Catalogue reveals extensive viral diversity and age-dependent community structure

  • Simeon Nthuku,
  • James Mordecai,
  • Abiola A. Babajide,
  • David Makoko,
  • Yacouba Sawadogo,
  • Olaitan I. Awe

摘要

The human gut virome is a critical yet understudied component of the microbiome that shapes microbial community structure and host-microbe interactions. However, most existing human gut virome reference databases have been constructed predominantly from populations in high-income countries, resulting in the substantial underrepresentation of African populations. To help address this disparity, we developed the Kenyan Human Gut Virome Catalogue (KHGVC), the first comprehensive human gut virome resource for Kenya and the first country-specific human gut virome catalogue from Africa. Using a standardized viromics pipeline applied to 626 fecal metagenomes spanning infants and adults across three Kenyan counties, we reconstructed 116,968 viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs). Cross-catalogue comparisons revealed extensive novelty where 65.6% of KHGVC’s vOTUs larger than 10 kb lacked matches in five major human gut virome databases, and 95% remained unique relative to the Unified Human Gut Virome (UHGV). Temperate bacteriophages accounted for ~ 70% of vOTUs, supporting a major role for lysogeny in gut ecosystem stability. Functional annotation assigned putative roles to ~ 27% of predicted viral proteins, primarily structural and replication-associated functions. Application of KHGVC revealed pronounced age-dependent virome structuring in which infant viromes were less diverse and enriched in Bifidobacterium-infecting phages, including Bifidobacterium longum, whereas adult viromes exhibited greater diversity and expansion of Prevotella-associated phages. Together, the KHGVC substantially expands known human gut viral diversity and provides a foundational reference for Kenyan and African virome research. The KHGVC can be accessed freely through a publicly available interactive web interface (https://igmr.org/software/kenyavirocat).