Profiling of the Intestinal Community of : Taxonomy and Evolutionary Analysis
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are relevant commensals of the human gut due to their major presence and correlations to the host. In this study, we investigated intestinal of 51 healthy subjects and reconstructed their taxonomy and phylogeny. The relatively small number of intestinal allowed a systematic whole genome approach based on average amino acid identity (AAI) and core genome with the aim of revising the current classification into genera and determining evolutionary relationships. 51 healthy subjects' metagenomes were retrieved from public databases. After the dataset's validation through comparison with Human Microbiome Project (HMP) samples, the metagenomes were profiled using MetaPhlAn3 to identify the population ascribed to the class . Intestinal genomes were retrieved and subjected to AAI analysis and core genome identification. Phylogeny investigation was conducted with RAxML and Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic Mean (UPGMA) algorithms, and SplitsTree for split decomposition. 225 out of 406 bacterial taxonomic units were ascribed to [], among which 124 were assigned to the class . 77 out of the 124 taxonomic units were referred to a species, altogether covering 87.7% of abundance. According to the lowest AAI genus boundary set at 55%, 15 putative genera encompassing more than one species (G1 to G15) were identified, while 19 species did not cluster with any other one and each appeared to belong to a diverse genus. Phylogenetic investigations highlighted that most of the species clustered into three main evolutive clades. This study shed light on the species of colonizing the gut of healthy adults and pinpointed several gaps in knowledge regarding the taxonomy and the phylogeny of .
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