Summary: | The structure and dynamics of breast tissue bacteria can have far-reaching influences on women’s health, particularly on breast tumor development. However, there is little understanding on the ecological processes that shape the structure and dynamics of breast tissue bacteria. Here, we fill the gap by applying three metacommunity models for investigating the community assembly and diversity maintenance, including Sloan near neutral model, Harris et al. multisite neutral and Tang & Zhou niche-neutral hybrid models to reanalyze the 16S-rRNA sequencing datasets of 23 healthy, 12 benign tumor, and 33 malignant tumor tissue samples. First, we found that, at the community/metacommunity levels, the mechanisms of bacteria assembly and diversity maintenance of breast tissue bacteria were moderately influenced by stochastic drifts of bacteria demography (division, death, and dispersal of bacterial cells). At species level, on average, approximately 10 and 5% species were above (positively selected) and below (negatively selected) neutral, respectively. Furthermore, malignant tumor may raise the positively selected species up to 17%. Second, malignant tumor appears to inhibit microbial dispersal as evidenced by lowered migration rates, compared with the migration in normal and benign tumor tissues. These theoretic findings can be inspirational for further investigating the relationships between tissue bacteria and breast tumor progression/development.
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