Published February 7, 2013 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: A jungle in there: bacteria in belly buttons are highly diverse, but predictable

  • 1. University of Florida
  • 2. University of California, Davis
  • 3. University of Colorado Boulder
  • 4. North Carolina State University

Description

The belly button is one of the habitats closest to us, and yet it remains relatively unexplored. We analyzed bacteria and arachaea from the belly buttons of humans from two different populations sampled within a nation-wide citizen science project. We examined bacterial and archaeal phylotypes present and their diversity using multiplex pyrosequencing of 16S rDNA libraries. We then tested the oligarchy hypothesis borrowed from tropical macroecology, namely that the frequency of phylotypes in one sample of humans predicts its frequency in another independent sample. We also tested the predictions that frequent phylotypes (the oligarchs) tend to be common when present, and tend to be more phylogenetically clustered than rare phylotypes. Once rarefied to four hundred reads per sample, bacterial communities from belly buttons proved to be at least as diverse as communities known from other skin studies (on average 67 bacterial phylotypes per belly button). However, the belly button communities were strongly dominated by a few taxa: only 6 phylotypes occurred on >80% humans. While these frequent bacterial phylotypes (the archaea were all rare) are a tiny part of the total diversity of bacteria in human navels (<0.3% of phylotypes), they constitute a major portion of individual reads (~1/3), and are predictable among independent samples of humans, in terms of both the occurrence and evolutionary relatedness (more closely related than randomly drawn equal sets of phylotypes). Thus, the hypothesis that "oligarchs" dominate diverse assemblages appears to be supported by human-associated bacteria. Although it remains difficult to predict which species of bacteria might be found on a particular human, predicting which species are most frequent (or rare) seems more straightforward, at least for those species living in belly buttons.

Notes

Files

BellyButton.Only_Mapping_File.txt

Files (45.8 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d1a32a6053abd67515249e3b2ce4bef3
5.2 kB Preview Download
md5:2ca6b8a3169c3ee882ac5162a1543f2c
27.8 MB Download
md5:46b338c9a61bcc807c27ba159d3ff46d
200 Bytes Preview Download
md5:2a950319bd42b90f57531ff0fcef2353
354 Bytes Preview Download
md5:7783d74441e6b2800c203c10cda6130d
252 Bytes Preview Download
md5:3e9ae2c4c01cc2845d17c4f69533edc8
18.0 MB Download

Additional details

Related works