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The maternal gut microbiome during pregnancy and offspring allergy and asthma.

Authors :
Gao, Yuan
Nanan, Ralph
Macia, Laurence
Tan, Jian
Sominsky, Luba
Quinn, Thomas P.
O'Hely, Martin
Ponsonby, Anne-Louise
Tang, Mimi L.K.
Collier, Fiona
Strickland, Deborah H.
Dhar, Poshmaal
Brix, Susanne
Phipps, Simon
Sly, Peter D.
Ranganathan, Sarath
Stokholm, Jakob
Kristiansen, Karsten
Gray, Lawrence E.K.
Vuillermin, Peter
Source :
Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology; Sep2021, Vol. 148 Issue 3, p669-678, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Environmental exposures during pregnancy that alter both the maternal gut microbiome and the infant's risk of allergic disease and asthma include a traditional farm environment and consumption of unpasteurized cow's milk, antibiotic use, dietary fiber, and psychosocial stress. Multiple mechanisms acting in concert may underpin these associations and prime the infant to acquire immune competence and homeostasis following exposure to the extrauterine environment. Cellular and metabolic products of the maternal gut microbiome can promote the expression of microbial pattern recognition receptors, as well as thymic and bone marrow hematopoiesis relevant to regulatory immunity. At birth, transmission of maternally derived bacteria likely leverages this in utero programming to accelerate postnatal transition from a T H 2- to T H 1- and T H 17-dominant immune phenotype and maturation of regulatory immune mechanisms, which in turn reduce the child's risk of allergic disease and asthma. Although our understanding of these phenomena is rapidly evolving, the field is relatively nascent, and we are yet to translate existing knowledge into interventions that substantially reduce disease risk in humans. Here, we review evidence that the maternal gut microbiome impacts the offspring's risk of allergic disease and asthma, discuss challenges and future directions for the field, and propose the hypothesis that maternal carriage of Prevotella copri during pregnancy decreases the offspring's risk of allergic disease via production of succinate, which in turn promotes bone marrow myelopoiesis of dendritic cell precursors in the fetus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00916749
Volume :
148
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152061454
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2021.07.011