Prevotella stercorea defines dual ecological pathways linking the gut microbiome to infection susceptibility

Published: 16 June 2026| Version 2 | DOI: 10.17632/fr5p4cgc7j.2
Contributor:
Ogochukwu Ofordile

Description

Research hypothesis We hypothesised that Prevotella stercorea, previously associated with reduced infection risk in Gambian children, exerts protection through two mechanistically distinct ecological pathways: a community-mediated pathway operating through microbiome richness and colonisation resistance, and a species-autonomous pathway independent of community structure. We further hypothesised that expression of the species-autonomous pathway is conditioned by host immune-metabolic reserve, operationalised using weight-for-age z-score (WAZ), and reflected in host inflammatory phenotypes. What the data shows This dataset contains species-level gut microbiome taxonomic abundance data, clinical metadata, anthropometric measures, inflammatory biomarkers, and adverse event records from 633 children aged 6–35 months enrolled in the IHAT-GUT randomised controlled trial (NCT02941081) in rural Gambia. Stool samples were collected at Days 1, 15, and 85 of follow-up. Adverse events, including acute respiratory infection (ARI), diarrhoea, fever, and infection-related illness, were recorded prospectively over 113 days. Systemic inflammatory biomarkers include C-reactive protein (CRP), alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP), and faecal calprotectin. Notable findings P. stercorea positively predicts gut microbiome richness across all timepoints, consistent with a role in community assembly and colonisation resistance. However, its association with reduced ARI frequency (IRR = 0.946, p = 0.002) persists unchanged after richness adjustment, while richness itself is not associated with ARI, supporting a richness-independent, species-autonomous pathway. In contrast, diarrhoeal outcomes show directionally consistent evidence of partial richness mediation. A co-occurring congener, P. copri, does not retain an independent ARI association in joint models despite comparable associations with richness, indicating species specificity. Host context modifies these relationships: in lower-WAZ children, P. stercorea associates with reduced CRP and reduced ARI/fever burden, whereas in higher-WAZ children, baseline inflammatory tone predicts subsequent colonisation, consistent with host-context-dependent immune coupling. Data interpretation and use Species-level microbiome abundances are expressed as relative abundances and should be log-transformed (log₁+x) prior to regression modelling. Species richness is defined as the number of taxa with non-zero abundance per sample. Adverse event frequencies and durations were truncated at 5 episodes and 30 days, respectively, to reduce outlier influence. The complete reproducible analysis pipeline, including R scripts, model specifications, and mediation analyses, is available at: https://github.com/ofordile-star/IHAT_Pstercorea

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Infectious Disease, Symbiosis, Immunity, Gut Microbiota

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