enterotypes
Enterotypes are a proposed classification of the human gut microbiome into distinct community types defined by the relative abundance of particular bacterial groups. The concept emerged from analyses of large, cross-sectional microbiome datasets with the aim of summarizing complex microbial ecosystems into a few recurring patterns rather than a complete species catalog.
In the original formulation, three enterotypes were highlighted: one dominated by Bacteroides, another by Prevotella, and
Subsequent research has highlighted several caveats. Evidence suggests that enterotypes may not be universally present or
Methodologically, enterotype research relies on high-throughput sequencing data (16S rRNA gene sequencing and metagenomics) and statistical
Today, enterotypes are used as a heuristic to frame microbiome variation and to explore associations with diet