Department of Clinical Sciences and Community Health, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.
Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, NICU, Milan, Italy.
Eur J Pediatr. 2022 May;181(5):1811-1820. doi: 10.1007/s00431-022-04383-1. Epub 2022 Feb 5.
Although traditionally considered sterile, human milk is currently recognized as an alive ecosystem that harbors not only bacteria, but also viruses, fungi and yeasts, and minor genera, collectively known as the human milk microbiome (HMM). The seeding of HMM is a complex phenomenon whose dynamics are still a matter of research. Many factors contribute to its determination, both maternal, neonatal, environmental, and related to human milk itself. The transmission of microorganisms to the infant through breastfeeding may impact its present and future health, mainly shaping the GI tract microbiome and immune system. The existence and persistence of HMM as a conserved feature among different species may also have an evolutionary meaning, which will become apparent only in evolutionary times.
The complexities of HMM warrant further research in order to deepen our knowledge on its origin, determinants, and impact on infants' health. The practical and translational implications of research on HMM (e.g., reconstitution of donor human milk through inoculation of infant's own mother milk, modulation of HMM through maternal dietary supplementation) should not be overlooked.
• Human milk harbors a wide variety of microorganisms, ranging from bacteria to viruses, fungi and yeasts, and minor genera. • Human milk microbiome is shaped over time by many factors: maternal, neonatal, environmental, and related to human milk itself. • The transmission of microorganisms through breastfeeding may impact the infant's present and future health.
• We provide an overview on human milk microbiome, hopefully encouraging physicians to consider it among the other better-known breastfeeding benefits. • Further studies, with standardized and rigorous study designs to enhance accuracy and reproducibility of the results, are needed to deepen our knowledge of the human milk microbiota and its role in newborn and infant's health.
描述人乳微生物组(HMM)的特征和功能,包括其组成、来源和对婴儿健康的影响。
检索了PubMed 和 Embase 数据库中关于 HMM 的文献,包括人类和动物研究,重点关注了 HMM 的微生物组成、来源和对婴儿健康的影响。
HMM 是一个复杂的生态系统,包含多种微生物,如细菌、病毒、真菌和酵母,以及一些较小的属。HMM 的形成是一个复杂的过程,受到多种因素的影响,包括母体、新生儿、环境和与母乳本身相关的因素。通过母乳喂养将微生物传递给婴儿可能会影响其现在和未来的健康,主要是通过塑造胃肠道微生物组和免疫系统。HMM 作为不同物种之间的保守特征的存在和持续可能具有进化意义,这只有在进化时间尺度上才会显现出来。
HMM 的复杂性需要进一步研究,以加深我们对其起源、决定因素和对婴儿健康影响的认识。HMM 研究的实际和转化意义(例如,通过接种婴儿自己的母乳来重建供体母乳,通过母体饮食补充来调节 HMM)不应被忽视。