Diversity and composition of gut protist in young rural Zimbabwean children
Lorraine Tsitsi Pfavayi, Elopy Nimele Sibanda, Stephen Baker, Mark Woolhouse, Takafira Mduluza, Francisca Mutapi

TL;DR
This study explores gut protist diversity in young Zimbabwean children, finding that schistosome infection is linked to changes in protist composition.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into gut protist diversity in rural Zimbabwean children and links schistosome infection to specific protist taxa.
Findings
Blastocystis was the most abundant protist genus in the gut of preschool-aged children.
Schistosoma hematobium infection was significantly associated with increased abundance of specific protist taxa.
Pathogenic protists like E. histolytica and Cryptosporidium were present but at low prevalence.
Abstract
The human gut microbiome harbours diverse species of archaea, bacteria, fungi, protists and viruses. To date, most gut microbiome studies have focused on bacteria, neglecting other microbial communities. Consequently, less is known about the diversity and abundance of the latter. Here, we aimed to characterise the diversity and composition of protists in the gut of preschool-aged children (PSAC) in rural Zimbabwe relative to host age, sex, and schistosome infection status. The gut protist of 113 PSAC (1–5 years) was examined via shotgun metagenomic sequencing and analysed for diversity. Variation in protist abundance with host and environmental factors was analysed by permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA). To investigate how the composition of specific taxa varies across age, sex, nutritional measures and Schistosoma hematobium infection status, analysis of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Child Nutrition and Water Access · Infant Nutrition and Health
