超越细菌微生物组:人乳病毒及其对发育中的婴儿的影响。

Q1 Medicine
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-03-20 DOI:10.1159/000504997
Sindhu Mohandas, Pia S Pannaraj
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引用次数: 22

摘要

母乳微生物在婴儿健康和疾病中起着重要作用。新出现的证据表明,人乳病毒也可通过母乳从母亲传染给婴儿。这些病毒包括真核病毒、被称为噬菌体的细菌感染病毒和其他病毒颗粒。人乳病毒在塑造婴儿肠道病毒群和微生物群方面起着重要作用。真核DNA和RNA病毒对致病性构成挑战和保护。噬菌体具有杀死细菌或为其提供潜在有益基因功能的能力,从而形成微生物群。早期婴儿病毒组由噬菌体主导,这可能有助于早期生命中高度动态的微生物组。随着代谢、内分泌、神经和免疫通路的快速成熟,儿童早期发育有一个关键的窗口期。在此期间,微生物在婴儿体内的定植在这些途径的建立和成熟中起着重要作用。通过母乳喂养传播的病毒在这些免疫发育的关键时间点也可能特别重要。对母婴进行更多的纵向研究将有助于更好地确定母乳病毒及其对生长中的婴儿发育的功能影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond the Bacterial Microbiome: Virome of Human Milk and Effects on the Developing Infant.

Human milk microbes play an important role in infant health and disease. Emerging evidence shows that human milk viruses are also transmitted from the mother to the infant via breastfeeding. These viruses include eukaryotic viruses, bacterium-infecting viruses called bacteriophages, and other viral particles. Human milk viruses are instrumental in shaping the infant gut virome and microbiome. Eukaryotic DNA and RNA viruses contribute to pathogenic challenges and protection. Bacteriophages have the ability to kill bacteria or supply them with potentially beneficial gene functions, thereby shaping the microbiome. The early infant virome is dominated by bacteriophages that likely contribute to a highly dynamic microbiome in the early life. There is a critical window of early childhood growth with rapid maturation of metabolic, endocrine, neural, and immune pathways. The colonization of microbes in the infant body during this time plays an important role in the establishment and maturation of these pathways. The virome transmitted via breastfeeding may also be particularly important at these critical time points of immune development. More longitudinal studies of mother-infant pairs will help to better define the human milk virome and their functional impact on the development of the growing infant.

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来源期刊
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
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