Mother-to-Infant Microbial Transmission from Different Body Sites Shapes the Developing Infant Gut Microbiome.

Cell Host Microbe
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

The acquisition and development of the infant microbiome are key to establishing a healthy host-microbiome symbiosis. The maternal microbial reservoir is thought to play a crucial role in this process. However, the source and transmission routes of the infant pioneering microbes are poorly understood. To address this, we longitudinally sampled the microbiome of 25 mother-infant pairs across multiple body sites from birth up to 4 months postpartum. Strain-level metagenomic profiling showed a rapid influx of microbes at birth followed by strong selection during the first few days of life. Maternal skin and vaginal strains colonize only transiently, and the infant continues to acquire microbes from distinct maternal sources after birth. Maternal gut strains proved more persistent in the infant gut and ecologically better adapted than those acquired from other sources. Together, these data describe the mother-to-infant microbiome transmission routes that are integral in the development of the infant microbiome.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell Host Microbe
Volume
24
Issue
1
Pages
133-145.e5
Date Published
2018 07 11
ISSN
1934-6069
DOI
10.1016/j.chom.2018.06.005
PubMed ID
30001516
PubMed Central ID
PMC6716579
Links
Grant list
716575 / ERC_ / European Research Council / International