ISGlobal, Barcelona, Spain; Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF), Barcelona, Spain; CIBER Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Spain.
Institute of Agrochemistry and Food Technology-National Research Council (IATA-CSIC), Valencia, Spain.
Environ Res. 2024 Sep 15;257:119283. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.119283. Epub 2024 Jun 1.
Animal and human studies indicate that exposure to air pollution and natural environments might modulate the gut microbiota, but epidemiological evidence is very scarce.
To assess the potential impact of pre- and postnatal exposure to air pollution and green spaces on infant gut microbiota assembly and trajectories during the first year of life.
MAMI ("MAternal MIcrobes") birth cohort (Valencia, Spain, N = 162) was used to study the impact of environmental exposure (acute and chronic) on infant gut microbiota during the first year of life (amplicon-based 16S rRNA sequencing). At 7 days and at 1, 6 and 12 months, residential pre- and postnatal exposure to air pollutants (NO, black carbon -BC-, PM and O) and green spaces indicators (NDVI and area of green spaces at 300, 500 and 1000 m buffers) were obtained. For the association between exposures and alpha diversity indicators linear regression models (cross-sectional analyses) and mixed models, including individual as a random effect (longitudinal analyses), were applied. For the differential taxon analysis, the ANCOM-BC package with a log count transformation and multiple-testing corrections were used.
Acute exposure in the first week of life and chronic postnatal exposure to NO were associated with a reduction in microbial alpha diversity, while the effects of green space exposure were not evident. Acute and chronic (prenatal or postnatal) exposure to NO resulted in increased abundance of Haemophilus, Akkermansia, Alistipes, Eggerthella, and Tyzerella populations, while increasing green space exposure associated with increased Negativicoccus, Senegalimassilia and Anaerococcus and decreased Tyzzerella and Lachnoclostridium populations.
We observed a decrease in the diversity of the gut microbiota and signs of alteration in its composition among infants exposed to higher levels of NO. Increasing green space exposure was also associated with changes in gut microbial composition. Further research is needed to confirm these findings.
动物和人类研究表明,暴露于空气污染和自然环境中可能会调节肠道微生物群,但流行病学证据非常有限。
评估产前和产后暴露于空气污染和绿地对婴儿肠道微生物群组成和生命第一年轨迹的潜在影响。
使用 MAMI(“MAternal MIcrobes”)出生队列(西班牙巴伦西亚,N=162)研究环境暴露(急性和慢性)对生命第一年婴儿肠道微生物群的影响(基于扩增子的 16S rRNA 测序)。在 7 天和 1、6 和 12 个月时,获得了住宅产前和产后暴露于空气污染物(NO、黑碳-BC-、PM 和 O)和绿地指标(NDVI 和 300、500 和 1000 m 缓冲区的绿地面积)。对于暴露与 alpha 多样性指标的关联,应用了线性回归模型(横断面分析)和混合模型,包括个体作为随机效应(纵向分析)。对于差异分类群分析,使用了具有对数计数转换和多重检验校正的 ANCOM-BC 包。
生命第一周的急性暴露和产后慢性暴露于 NO 与微生物 alpha 多样性降低有关,而绿地暴露的影响则不明显。急性和慢性(产前或产后)NO 暴露导致嗜血杆菌、阿克曼氏菌、Alistipes、Eggerthella 和 Tyzerella 种群增加,而增加绿地暴露与增加 Negativicoccus、塞内加尔米亚西利亚和厌氧球菌以及减少 Tyzzerella 和 Lachnoclostridium 种群有关。
我们观察到暴露于较高水平 NO 的婴儿肠道微生物群多样性降低,其组成出现改变的迹象。增加绿地暴露也与肠道微生物组成的变化有关。需要进一步研究来证实这些发现。