Human skin, oral, and gut microbiomes predict chronological age.
Published in Msystems, 2020
Recommended citation: Huang, et al. (2020). "Human skin, oral, and gut microbiomes predict chronological age.." Msystems, 5(1):10-128. https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.00985-24
Human gut microbiomes are known to change with age, yet the relative value of human microbiomes across the body as predictors of age, and prediction robustness across populations is unknown. In this study, we tested the ability of the oral, gut, and skin (hand and forehead) microbiomes to predict age in adults using random forest regression on data combined from multiple publicly available studies, evaluating the models in each cohort individually. Intriguingly, the skin microbiome provides the best prediction of age (mean ± standard deviation, 3.8 ± 0.45 years, versus 4.5 ± 0.14 years for the oral microbiome and 11.5 ± 0.12 years for the gut microbiome). This also agrees with forensic studies showing that the skin microbiome predicts postmortem interval better than microbiomes from other body sites. Age prediction models constructed from the hand microbiome generalized to the forehead and vice versa, across cohorts, and results from the gut microbiome generalized across multiple cohorts (United States, United Kingdom, and China). Interestingly, taxa enriched in young individuals (18 to 30 years) tend to be more abundant and more prevalent than taxa enriched in elderly individuals (>60 yrs), suggesting a model in which physiological aging occurs concomitantly with the loss of key taxa over a lifetime, enabling potential microbiome-targeted therapeutic strategies to prevent aging.
Recommended citation: Huang S, Haiminen N, Carrieri AP, Hu R, Jiang L, Parida L, Russell B, Allaband C, Zarrinpar A, Vázquez-Baeza Y, Belda-Ferre P. Human skin, oral, and gut microbiomes predict chronological age. Msystems. 2020 Feb 11;5(1):10-128.
