Prevotella stercorea links gut microbiome ecology to respiratory infection protection through a host-context-dependent, species-autonomous pathway
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Using a longitudinal cohort of 633 Gambian children (IHAT-GUT, NCT02941081 ), we resolve two mechanistically distinct ecological pathways linking Prevotella stercorea to infection risk. Its abundance positively predicts gut microbiome richness, consistent with community-level colonisation resistance for enteric outcomes. However, its association with reduced acute respiratory infection (ARI) persists unchanged after richness adjustment, identifying a species-autonomous pathway independent of community diversity. Weight-for-age z-score (WAZ) is uncorrelated with microbiome richness within strata, supporting WAZ as a proxy for host immune-metabolic reserve rather than a determinant of microbiome composition. In Low-WAZ children, P. stercorea at Day 1 associates with suppressed CRP, whereas in higher-WAZ children, elevated Day 1 inflammation predicts subsequent P. stercorea colonisation at Day 85, consistent with host-context-dependent immune selection. ARI and fever protection is richness-independent and concentrated in Low-WAZ children. P. copri does not retain an independent protective association when modelled jointly. These findings have direct implications for microbiome-directed interventions.
Impact statement
Gut Prevotella stercorea protects young children against respiratory infection through a species-specific, community-independent immune pathway that is most active in immunologically vulnerable hosts, defining a new mechanistic target for microbiome-directed respiratory therapeutics.