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Heritable vaginal bacteria influence immune tolerance and relate to early-life markers of allergic sensitization in infancy

Authors :
Kathryn E. McCauley
Elze Rackaityte
Brandon LaMere
Douglas W. Fadrosh
Kei E. Fujimura
Ariane R. Panzer
Din L. Lin
Kole V. Lynch
Joanna Halkias
Ventura F. Mendoza
Trevor D. Burt
Casper Bendixsen
Kathrine Barnes
Haejin Kim
Kyra Jones
Dennis R. Ownby
Christine C. Johnson
Christine M. Seroogy
James E. Gern
Homer A. Boushey
Susan V. Lynch
Source :
Cell reports. Medicine. 3(8)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Maternal asthma status, prenatal exposures, and infant gut microbiota perturbation are associated with heightened risk of atopy and asthma risk in childhood, observations hypothetically linked by intergenerational microbial transmission. Using maternal vaginal (n = 184) and paired infant stool (n = 172) samples, we identify four compositionally and functionally distinct Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiota clusters (VCs) that relate to prenatal maternal health and exposures and infant serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) status at 1 year. Variance in bacteria shared between mother and infant pairs relate to VCs, maternal allergy/asthma status, and infant IgE levels. Heritable bacterial gene pathways associated with infant IgE include fatty acid synthesis and histamine and tryptophan degradation. In vitro, vertically transmitted Lactobacillus jensenii strains induce immunosuppressive phenotypes on human antigen-presenting cells. Murine supplementation with L. jensenii reduces lung eosinophils, neutrophilic expansion, and the proportion of interleukin-4 (IL-4)

Details

ISSN :
26663791
Volume :
3
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell reports. Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9de91df8fd9e3cecf94d994b374b53a5