The Arumugam Discovery
In 2011, Arumugam et al. published a landmark Nature paper analyzing microbiota from 39 studies. Using clustering algorithms, they identified three "enterotypes" dominated by Bacteroides, Prevotella, or Ruminococcus. This finding suggested individuals naturally sort into discrete microbiota categories, akin to blood types. The enterotype concept was embraced for its simplicity: a clinical tool for categorization.
Diet and Enterotype Association
Initial studies linked enterotypes to diet. Bacteroides-dominant microbiota associated with Western, high-fat/protein diets; Prevotella with plant-based diets rich in carbohydrates and fiber. This correlation suggested functional significance and potential for intervention. Some hoped shifting diet would alter enterotype and improve health.
Criticism and Methodological Issues
Subsequent analysis revealed problems. Different clustering algorithms produced different numbers of clusters (2, 3, or 4 enterotypes depending on method). Enterotype assignment was often equivocal: many individuals scored intermediate. Sequencing depth mattered: shallow coverage misclassified individuals. The "boundaries" between clusters were mathematically artificial, not biologically validated.
Gradients, Not Clusters
Re-analysis suggested enterotypes reflect continuous gradients in Bacteroides and Prevotella abundance rather than discrete clusters. An individual's microbiota could shift along these gradients with diet changes, and no sharp transition demarcated enterotype switching. The gradient model better explained data: individuals occupy a continuum, not discrete islands.
Current Consensus
Enterotypes remain useful as shorthand for broad microbiota patterns, similar to body types or personality categories—descriptive simplifications of complex variation. They lack mechanistic importance: clinical outcomes correlate with specific bacterial functions (SCFA production, immunogenicity), not enterotype per se. Modern analyses emphasize functional redundancy, metabolic potential, and individual variation over enterotype classification. The three-type model is now seen as a useful pedagogical tool, not a biological truth.