Matsuyama M, Gomez-Arango L F, Fukuma N M, Morrison M, Davies P S W, Hill R J
1Children's Nutrition Research Centre,UQ Child Health Research Centre,Faculty of Medicine,The University of Queensland,South Brisbane,QLD,Australia.
2School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences,Faculty of Science,The University of Queensland,St Lucia,QLD,Australia.
J Dev Orig Health Dis. 2019 Apr;10(2):206-213. doi: 10.1017/S2040174418000624. Epub 2018 Nov 19.
The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of the most commonly cited factors that may have influenced infants' gut microbiota profiles at one year of age: mode of delivery, breastfeeding duration and antibiotic exposure. Barcoded V3/V4 amplicons of bacterial 16S-rRNA gene were prepared from the stool samples of 52 healthy 1-year-old Australian children and sequenced using the Illumina MiSeq platform. Following the quality checks, the data were processed using the Quantitative Insights Into Microbial Ecology pipeline and analysed using the Calypso package for microbiome data analysis. The stool microbiota profiles of children still breastfed were significantly different from that of children weaned earlier (P<0.05), independent of the age of solid food introduction. Among children still breastfed, Veillonella spp. abundance was higher. Children no longer breastfed possessed a more 'mature' microbiota, with notable increases of Firmicutes. The microbiota profiles of the children could not be differentiated by delivery mode or antibiotic exposure. Further analysis based on children's feeding patterns found children who were breastfed alongside solid food had significantly different microbiota profiles compared to that of children who were receiving both breastmilk and formula milk alongside solid food. This study provided evidence that breastfeeding continues to influence gut microbial community even at late infancy when these children are also consuming table foods. At this age, any impacts from mode of delivery or antibiotic exposure did not appear to be discernible imprints on the microbial community profiles of these healthy children.
本研究的目的是调查可能影响1岁婴儿肠道微生物群谱的最常被提及的因素的影响:分娩方式、母乳喂养持续时间和抗生素暴露。从52名健康的1岁澳大利亚儿童的粪便样本中制备细菌16S-rRNA基因的条形码V3/V4扩增子,并使用Illumina MiSeq平台进行测序。在质量检查之后,使用微生物生态学定量洞察流程对数据进行处理,并使用用于微生物组数据分析的Calypso软件包进行分析。仍在母乳喂养的儿童的粪便微生物群谱与较早断奶的儿童的粪便微生物群谱显著不同(P<0.05),与固体食物引入的年龄无关。在仍在母乳喂养的儿童中,韦荣球菌属的丰度更高。不再母乳喂养的儿童拥有更“成熟”的微生物群,厚壁菌门显著增加。儿童的微生物群谱不能通过分娩方式或抗生素暴露来区分。基于儿童喂养模式的进一步分析发现,与同时接受母乳和配方奶加固体食物的儿童相比,母乳喂养加固体食物的儿童的微生物群谱显著不同。这项研究提供了证据,表明即使在婴儿晚期这些儿童也食用辅食时,母乳喂养仍会继续影响肠道微生物群落。在这个年龄,分娩方式或抗生素暴露的任何影响似乎都不会在这些健康儿童的微生物群落谱上留下明显印记。