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      Metagenomic systems biology and metabolic modeling of the human microbiome: from species composition to community assembly rules.

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          Abstract

          The human microbiome is a key contributor to health and development. Yet little is known about the ecological forces that are at play in defining the composition of such host-associated communities. Metagenomics-based studies have uncovered clear patterns of community structure but are often incapable of distinguishing alternative structuring paradigms. In a recent study, we integrated metagenomic analysis with a systems biology approach, using a reverse ecology framework to model numerous human microbiota species and to infer metabolic interactions between species. Comparing predicted interactions with species composition data revealed that the assembly of the human microbiome is dominated at the community level by habitat filtering. Furthermore, we demonstrated that this habitat filtering cannot be accounted for by known host phenotypes or by the metabolic versatility of the various species. Here we provide a summary of our findings and offer a brief perspective on related studies and on future approaches utilizing this metagenomic systems biology framework.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Gut Microbes
          Gut microbes
          1949-0984
          1949-0976
          : 5
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Genome Sciences; University of Washington; Seattle WA USA.
          [2 ] Department of Genome Sciences; University of Washington; Seattle WA USA; Department of Computer Science and Engineering; University of Washington; Seattle, WA USA; Santa Fe Institute; Santa Fe, NM USA.
          Article
          28261
          10.4161/gmic.28261
          24637600
          6ccef6f9-a67a-4a41-9159-bdabe6a67f73
          History

          community assembly,computational model,habitat filtering,metabolic modeling,reverse ecology,species interaction

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