Longevity of centenarians is reflected by the gut microbiome with youth-associated signatures

Centenarians are an excellent model to study the relationship between the gut microbiome and longevity. To characterize the gut microbiome signatures of aging, we conducted a cross-sectional investigation of 1,575 individuals (20-117 years) from Guangxi province of China, including 297 centenarians...

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Published inNature aging Vol. 3; no. 4; pp. 436 - 449
Main Authors Pang, Shifu, Chen, Xiaodong, Lu, Zhilong, Meng, Lili, Huang, Yu, Yu, Xiuqi, Huang, Lianfei, Ye, Pengpeng, Chen, Xiaochun, Liang, Jian, Peng, Tao, Luo, Weifei, Wang, Shuai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Nature Publishing Group 01.04.2023
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Summary:Centenarians are an excellent model to study the relationship between the gut microbiome and longevity. To characterize the gut microbiome signatures of aging, we conducted a cross-sectional investigation of 1,575 individuals (20-117 years) from Guangxi province of China, including 297 centenarians (n = 45 with longitudinal sampling). Compared to their old adult counterparts, centenarians displayed youth-associated features in the gut microbiome characterized by an over-representation of a Bacteroides-dominated enterotype, increase in species evenness, enrichment of potentially beneficial Bacteroidetes and depletion of potential pathobionts. Health status stratification in older individuals did not alter the directional trends for these signature comparisons but revealed more apparent associations in less healthy individuals. Importantly, longitudinal analysis of centenarians across a 1.5-year period indicated that the youth-associated gut microbial signatures were enhanced with regard to increased evenness, reduction in interindividual variation and stability of Bacteroides, and that centenarians with low microbial evenness were prone to large microbiome instability during aging. These results together highlight a youth-related aging pattern of the gut microbiome for long-lived individuals.
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ISSN:2662-8465
2662-8465
DOI:10.1038/s43587-023-00389-y