Paternal and induced gut microbiota seeding complement mother-to-infant transmission

IF 20.6 1区 医学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
Léonard Dubois, Mireia Valles-Colomer, Alise Ponsero, Otto Helve, Sture Andersson, Kaija-Leena Kolho, Francesco Asnicar, Katri Korpela, Anne Salonen, Nicola Segata, Willem M. de Vos
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Microbial colonization of the neonatal gut involves maternal seeding, which is partially disrupted in cesarean-born infants and after intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis. However, other physically close individuals could complement such seeding. To assess the role of both parents and of induced seeding, we analyzed two longitudinal metagenomic datasets (health and early life microbiota [HELMi]: N = 74 infants, 398 samples, and SECFLOR: N = 7 infants, 35 samples) with cesarean-born infants who received maternal fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT). We found that the father constitutes a stable source of strains for the infant independently of the delivery mode, with the cumulative contribution becoming comparable to that of the mother after 1 year. Maternal FMT increased mother-infant strain sharing in cesarean-born infants, raising the average bacterial empirical growth rate while reducing pathogen colonization. Overall, our results indicate that maternal seeding is partly complemented by that of the father and support the potential of induced seeding to restore potential deviations in this process.

Abstract Image

父代和诱导肠道微生物群播种补充母婴传播
新生儿肠道的微生物定植涉及母体播种,在剖宫产婴儿和产前抗生素预防后,母体播种会部分中断。然而,其他身体上亲近的个体可以补充这种播种。为了评估父母双方和诱导播种的作用,我们分析了两个纵向元基因组数据集(健康和早期生命微生物群 [HELMi],N = 74 个婴儿,398 个样本):N = 74 名婴儿,398 个样本;SECFLOR:N = 7 名婴儿,35 个样本),这些剖腹产婴儿接受了母体粪便微生物群移植(FMT)。我们发现,无论分娩方式如何,父亲都是婴儿的稳定菌株来源,其累积贡献在 1 年后与母亲相当。母体 FMT 增加了剖宫产婴儿的母婴菌株共享,提高了平均细菌经验增长率,同时降低了病原体定植率。总之,我们的研究结果表明,母体的播种在一定程度上得到了父体播种的补充,并支持通过诱导播种来恢复这一过程中可能出现的偏差。
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来源期刊
Cell host & microbe
Cell host & microbe 生物-微生物学
CiteScore
45.10
自引率
1.70%
发文量
201
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Cell Host & Microbe is a scientific journal that was launched in March 2007. The journal aims to provide a platform for scientists to exchange ideas and concepts related to the study of microbes and their interaction with host organisms at a molecular, cellular, and immune level. It publishes novel findings on a wide range of microorganisms including bacteria, fungi, parasites, and viruses. The journal focuses on the interface between the microbe and its host, whether the host is a vertebrate, invertebrate, or plant, and whether the microbe is pathogenic, non-pathogenic, or commensal. The integrated study of microbes and their interactions with each other, their host, and the cellular environment they inhabit is a unifying theme of the journal. The published work in Cell Host & Microbe is expected to be of exceptional significance within its field and also of interest to researchers in other areas. In addition to primary research articles, the journal features expert analysis, commentary, and reviews on current topics of interest in the field.
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