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Birthmode and environment-dependent microbiota transmission dynamics are complemented by breastfeeding during the first year

Authors :
European Commission
Generalitat Valenciana
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Research Council
National Institutes of Health (US)
EMBO
Cabrera Rubio, Raúl [0000-0003-3652-9558]
Collado, María Carmen [0000-0002-6204-4864]
Selma Royo, Marta
Dubois, Léonard
Manara, Serena
Armanini, Federica
Cabrera Rubio, Raúl
Valles-Colomer, Mireia
González, Sonia
Parra Llorca, Anna
Escuriet, Ramon
Bode, Lars
Martínez Costa, Cecilia
Segata, Nicola
Collado, María Carmen
European Commission
Generalitat Valenciana
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Research Council
National Institutes of Health (US)
EMBO
Cabrera Rubio, Raúl [0000-0003-3652-9558]
Collado, María Carmen [0000-0002-6204-4864]
Selma Royo, Marta
Dubois, Léonard
Manara, Serena
Armanini, Federica
Cabrera Rubio, Raúl
Valles-Colomer, Mireia
González, Sonia
Parra Llorca, Anna
Escuriet, Ramon
Bode, Lars
Martínez Costa, Cecilia
Segata, Nicola
Collado, María Carmen
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The composition and maturation of the early-life microbiota are modulated by a number of perinatal factors, whose interplay in relation to microbial vertical transmission remains inadequately elucidated. Using recent strain-tracking methodologies, we analyzed mother-to-infant microbiota transmission in two different birth environments: hospital-born (vaginal/cesarean) and home-born (vaginal) infants and their mothers. While delivery mode primarily explains initial compositional differences, place of birth impacts transmission timing-being early in homebirths and delayed in cesarean deliveries. Transmission patterns vary greatly across species and birth groups, yet certain species, like Bifidobacterium longum, are consistently vertically transmitted regardless of delivery setting. Strain-level analysis of B. longum highlights relevant and consistent subspecies replacement patterns mainly explained by breastfeeding practices, which drive changes in human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) degrading capabilities. Our findings highlight how delivery setting, breastfeeding duration, and other lifestyle preferences collectively shape vertical transmission, impacting infant gut colonization during early life.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442728690
Document Type :
Electronic Resource