In this tree (Figure 3A) the bonobos and chimpanzees appear in mo

In this tree (Figure 3A) the bonobos and chimpanzees appear in mostly distinct clusters, while the two human groups are more intermingled with one another. We also carried out principal component (PC) analysis of the

UniFrac distances; the resulting plot of PC1 vs. PC2 (Figure 4A) is concordant with the tree in showing differences between the ape and human saliva microbiomes, although with some overlap. The UniFrac analysis thus distinguishes the saliva microbiome of the two Pan species from that of the two human populations, albeit not completely. Figure 3 Cluster (UPGMA) tree based on UniFrac distances. A, Bonobos, Chimpanzees, DRC Humans, and SL Humans. B, including zoo apes (B = bonobo, C = chimpanzee, G = gorilla, O = orangutan). Figure 4 Plots of PC1 vs. PC2, based on UniFrac distances. A, Bonobos, Chimpanzees, DRC Humans, and SL Humans. B, including zoo apes (B = bonobo, C = chimpanzee, G = gorilla, O = orangutan). click here The average UniFrac distance between the two human groups is significantly larger than that between the two ape species, while the average UniFrac distance between the humans and the wild apes is significantly larger than that within either species (Additional Selleck Maraviroc file 2: Figure S5). As a measure of within-population diversity based on OTUs, we also calculated Faith’s Phylogenetic Diversity (PD), which is the total length of all of the branches in a phylogenetic tree that encompass

the group of interest [20]. The results (Additional file 2: Figure S6) indicate that DRC humans have less diversity than bonobos (from the same sanctuary), whereas SL humans and chimpanzees have equivalent levels of PD. The UniFrac analysis summarizes the overlap in microbiomes between each pair of individuals by a single number, thereby losing information. We therefore also used a network-based approach to analyze the relationships among sequences and individuals. In this analysis, the individual sequences were first assigned to OTUs by collapsing sequences that differ by less than 3%, to avoid any influence of sequence

errors. The resulting OTUs and individuals were then designated as nodes in a network, with OTUs PD184352 (CI-1040) connected to the individual(s) that they were found in. The resulting diagram (Figure 5A) completely distinguishes the microbiomes of the two Pan species from the two human populations. The bonobos and chimpanzees are nearly completely distinguished from one another, with three chimpanzees grouping with the bonobos (these are the same three chimpanzees that group with the bonobos in Figure 3A). Individuals from the two human groups are intermingled with one another. Figure 5 Network analyses. A, Bonobos, Chimpanzees, DRC Humans, and SL Humans. B, including zoo apes. We also compared the saliva microbiome from the humans and sanctuary apes to the fecal microbiome from humans and wild apes from a previous study [9].

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