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Diversity and composition of gut protist in young rural Zimbabwean children

Title: Diversity and composition of gut protist in young rural Zimbabwean children
Authors: Pfavayi, Lorraine Tsitsi; Sibanda, Elopy Nimele; Baker, Stephen; Woolhouse, Mark; Mduluza, Takafira; Mutapi, Francisca
Publisher Information: Frontiers Media S.A.
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Subject Terms: diversity; children; composition; Zimbabwe; gut protist
Description: Peer reviewed: True ; Acknowledgements: We thank all the members of the Parasite Immuno-epidemiology Group at the University of Edinburgh for their valuable comments in preparing this manuscript. ; Background: 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. Methods: 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 composition of microbiomes (ANCOM) was used. Results: Eighty protist genera were identified, and the most abundant genera detected was Blastocystis. The prevalence of pathogenic protists was comparatively low, with 12.4% and 3.4% of the participants’ gut colonised by E. histolytica and Cryptosporidium, respectively. Of all the independent variables only S. haematobium infection showed significant relationship with the structure of the gut protist, being associated with increases in Peronospora, Pseudoperonospora, Plasmopara and Blastocystis (FDR= 0.009). Summary: This study provides data on the prevalence and diversity of the gut protists in young Zimbabwean children with an emphasis on the host factors; age, sex and schistosome infection status. Our results showed no association between the host factors investigated, including anthropometric measures adjusted for age and the intestinal protist composition and ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/zip; application/pdf; text/xml
Language: English
Relation: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/401276
Availability: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/401276
Accession Number: edsbas.DB260928
Database: BASE