出生过程、牛奶饮食和16S rRNA基因靶区选择对婴儿肠道细菌谱的影响

Q1 Medicine
Maze Ann Biol-Aquino , Christine Jane Perdiz , Melissa Borlagdan , James David Alcantara , Aida Mallillin
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引用次数: 5

摘要

围产期因素,如出生过程和牛奶饮食,对肠道微生物群的发育有很大的影响,通常使用16S rRNA基因扩增子测序来研究。然而,针对不同的高变区/s产生不同的细菌群落概况,这对于解释归因于这些影响因素的结果至关重要。在这项研究中,我们首先确定了出生过程和牛奶饮食对60名2-4 月龄健康菲律宾婴儿肠道细菌多样性和特征的影响。结果揭示了出生过程和婴儿牛奶饮食对这个年龄段婴儿肠道微生物群落的建立和/或变化的综合影响,这模糊了单一因素对婴儿肠道微生物群落特征的区分。在技术方面,我们选择了10个剖宫产纯母乳婴儿的粪便样本,用V3-V4和V4-V5引物进行扩增,并注意到厚壁菌门和放线菌门丰度的差异。尽管这些分类群的相对丰度存在差异,但我们注意到10个CD-BF样本中至少有4个具有相似的富集分类群。因此,2-4个月 大的婴儿的肠道微生物群是高度动态的,个体细菌群落对饮食调节至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Differences in the bacterial profiles of infant gut by birth process, milk diet, and choice of 16S rRNA gene target region

Perinatal factors such as birth process and milk diet have been known to greatly influence the development of gut microbiota, which is often studied using amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. However, targeting different hypervariable region/s generates variable bacterial community profiles that are critical in the interpretation of results attributed to such influential factors. In this study, we first determined the influence of birth process and milk diet on the bacterial diversity and profiles in the gut of 60 healthy Filipino infants aged 2–4 months old.

Results reveal the combined influence of birth process and infant milk diet in the establishment and/or shifts of microbial communities in the gut of infants during this age, which blurs out the distinction of microbial community profiles of the infant gut known to one factor alone. On the technical aspect, we elected 10 stool samples from cesarean-delivered exclusively breast-fed infants to be amplified with both V3-V4 and V4-V5 primers and noted differences in the abundance of Firmicutes and Actinobacteria. Despite variations in the relative abundance of these taxa, we noted that at least 4 of the 10 CD-BF samples share similar enriched taxa with both primer sets used. Hence, the gut microbiota of infants during the age of 2–4 months old is highly dynamic with individualistic bacterial communities that can be critical for dietary mediations.

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来源期刊
Human Microbiome Journal
Human Microbiome Journal Medicine-Infectious Diseases
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期刊介绍: The innumerable microbes living in and on our bodies are known to affect human wellbeing, but our knowledge of their role is still at the very early stages of understanding. Human Microbiome is a new open access journal dedicated to research on the impact of the microbiome on human health and disease. The journal will publish original research, reviews, comments, human microbe descriptions and genome, and letters. Topics covered will include: the repertoire of human-associated microbes, therapeutic intervention, pathophysiology, experimental models, physiological, geographical, and pathological changes, and technical reports; genomic, metabolomic, transcriptomic, and culturomic approaches are welcome.
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