Is There a Universal Endurance Microbiota?

Microorganisms. 2022 Nov 9;10(11):2213. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms10112213.

Abstract

Billions of microbes sculpt the gut ecosystem, affecting physiology. Since endurance athletes' performance is often physiology-limited, understanding the composition and interactions within athletes' gut microbiota could improve performance. Individual studies describe differences in the relative abundance of bacterial taxa in endurance athletes, suggesting the existence of an "endurance microbiota", yet the taxa identified are mostly non-overlapping. To narrow down the source of this variation, we created a bioinformatics workflow and reanalyzed fecal microbiota from four 16S rRNA gene sequence datasets associated with endurance athletes and controls, examining diversity, relative abundance, correlations, and association networks. There were no significant differences in alpha diversity among all datasets and only one out of four datasets showed a significant overall difference in bacterial community abundance. When bacteria were examined individually, there were no genera with significantly different relative abundance in all four datasets. Two genera were significantly different in two datasets (Veillonella and Romboutsia). No changes in correlated abundances were consistent across datasets. A power analysis using the variance in relative abundance detected in each dataset indicated that much larger sample sizes will be necessary to detect a modest difference in relative abundance especially given the multitude of covariates. Our analysis confirms several challenges when comparing microbiota in general, and indicates that microbes consistently or universally associated with human endurance remain elusive.

Keywords: 16S gene sequences; Romboutsia; Veillonella; barcode; network; workflow.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by SCU’s undergraduate research initiatives, specifically the DeNardo Scholar program (K.T.) and REAL program (H.O.) for financial support for undergraduate researchers.