School of Biological and Population Health Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
Environ Res. 2019 May;172:700-712. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2019.01.014. Epub 2019 Jan 11.
Gut microorganisms contribute to the metabolism of environmental toxicants, including methylmercury (MeHg). Our main objective was to investigate whether associations between biomarkers for prenatal MeHg exposure and maternal gut microbiota differed between early and late gestation.
Maternal blood and stool samples were collected during early (8.3-17 weeks, n=28) and late (27-36 weeks, n=24) gestation. Total mercury and MeHg concentrations were quantified in biomarkers, and inorganic mercury was estimated by subtraction. The diversity and structure of the gut microbiota were investigated using 16S rRNA gene profiling (n = 52). Biomarkers were dichotomized, and diversity patterns were compared between high/low mercury concentrations. Spearman's correlation was used to assess bivariate associations between MeHg biomarkers (stool, blood, and meconium), and 23 gut microbial taxa (genus or family level, >1% average relative abundance).
Within-person and between-person diversity patterns in gut microbiota differed between early/late gestation. The overall composition of the microbiome differed between high/low MeHg concentrations (in blood and stool) during early gestation, but not late gestation. Ten (of 23) taxa were significantly correlated with MeHg biomarkers (increasing or decreasing); however, associations differed, depending on whether the sample was collected during early or late gestation. A total of 43% of associations (69/161) reversed the direction of correlation between early/late gestation.
The time point at which a maternal fecal sample is collected may yield different associations between gut microorganisms and MeHg biomarkers, which may be due in part to remodeling of maternal microbiota during pregnancy. Our results suggest the effectiveness of dietary interventions to reduce prenatal MeHg exposure may differ between early and late gestation.
肠道微生物有助于环境毒物(包括甲基汞(MeHg))的代谢。我们的主要目的是研究产前 MeHg 暴露生物标志物与母体肠道微生物群之间的关联在妊娠早期和晚期是否存在差异。
在妊娠早期(8.3-17 周,n=28)和妊娠晚期(27-36 周,n=24)采集母体血液和粪便样本。在生物标志物中定量测定总汞和 MeHg 浓度,并通过减法估计无机汞。使用 16S rRNA 基因谱(n=52)研究肠道微生物群的多样性和结构。将生物标志物分为二项式,并比较高/低汞浓度之间的多样性模式。使用 Spearman 相关系数评估 MeHg 生物标志物(粪便、血液和胎便)与 23 种肠道微生物类群(属或科水平,平均相对丰度>1%)之间的双变量关联。
妊娠早期和晚期个体内和个体间的肠道微生物群多样性模式不同。在妊娠早期,血液和粪便中的高/低 MeHg 浓度之间的微生物组整体组成不同,但在妊娠晚期则不同。在妊娠早期,10(23 个)个分类群与 MeHg 生物标志物(增加或减少)显著相关;然而,关联因样本是在妊娠早期还是晚期采集而不同。总共 43%的关联(69/161)改变了妊娠早期/晚期之间的相关性方向。
收集母体粪便样本的时间点可能会产生肠道微生物群和 MeHg 生物标志物之间不同的关联,这可能部分归因于妊娠期间母体微生物群的重塑。我们的结果表明,饮食干预减少产前 MeHg 暴露的效果可能在妊娠早期和晚期有所不同。