| Literature DB >> 26495089 |
Eu Kyoung Lee1, Young Tae Ahn2, Chul Sung Huh3, Hwan Soo Kim1, Eugene Kim1, Yoon Hong Chun1, Jong-Seo Yoon1, Hyun Hee Kim1, Jin Tack Kim1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The microflora hypothesis may be the underlying explanation for the growth of inflammatory disease. In addition to many known affecting factors, knowing the gut microbiota of healthy newborns can help to understand the gut immunity and modulate it.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Cities; Feces; Infant; Microbiota; Newborn
Year: 2015 PMID: 26495089 PMCID: PMC4610329 DOI: 10.5812/ijp.2079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Pediatr ISSN: 2008-2142 Impact factor: 0.364
Bacteria Culture of Gut Microbiota From Each Culture Plate (n = 143) [a,b]
| Bacteria | Media | Range (CFU/g) | Mean (CFU/g) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| BHI | 3.33 × 102 - 3.81×109 | 1.18 × 108 |
|
| WC | 5 × 102 - 3.39 × 109 | 1.21 × 108 |
|
| Columbia | 3.2 × 102 - 3.99 × 109 | 7.51 × 107 |
|
| MRS | 1.0 × 103 - 1.25 ×109 | 3.77 ×107 |
|
| VRB | 3 × 102 - 2.08 × 108 | 1.22 × 106 |
|
| TOS | 9 × 103 - 2.3 × 104 | 2.24 × 102 |
a Abbreviations: BHI, brain heart infusion; MRS, Lactobacillus agar acc. to De Man, Rogosa and Sharpe; TOS, propionate agar; VRB, violet red bile; WC, wilkins-chalgren.
b Percentage of bacterial growth from each plate: total bacteria, 61.6%; anaerobes, 59.1%; G (+) bacteria, 42.4 %; lactobacilli, 34.1%; coliform, 28.5%; bifidobacteria, 2.1%.
Figure 1.Comparison of Bacterial Growth Between Early and Late Stool Passage
Within 24 hours after birth, 66.4% (71/107) of the stools passed, whereas 33.6% (36/107) of stools passed after > 24 hours of birth. Before 24 hours, Gram (+) growth was 46.5% (33/71) shown in gray box; no growth in white box, 53.5% (38/71). Coliform growth was 77.8% (28/36) in gray box with no growth of 22.2% (7/36) in white box. There are more bacteria grown in stools passed > 24 hours of birth (P = 0.009).
Figure 2.Different Microbiota Composition of Each Culture Plate According to Time (n = 107)
The x-axis indicates each culture plate. The y-axis indicates an average count of bacteria in log CFU. The blue bar represents stools passed within 24 hours after birth and red bar represents the stools passed after 24 hours. Total bacteria, lactobacilli, and anaerobes showed statistically significant P values. The vertical bar indicates standard errors.
Figure 3.Negative Correlation Between Lactobacillus (MRS) and Coliforms (VRB)
In culture analysis, most of coliform-present plates show lactobacilli negative medium and vice versa. In 72 stools, only 16 stools showed the growth of both lactobacilli and coliforms. The Spearman correlation coefficient rho was -0.463 between the two bacteria.
Figure 4.T-RFLP Analysis With HhaI and Clustering Analysis
A, T-RFLP patterns of 16S rDNAs from stools digested with HhaI. The 16S rDNAs were extracted from samples and amplified with the universal primers 27F and 1492R. Each peak represents a terminal restriction fragment of a specific length that corresponds to a bacterial phylotype. The meconium sample numbers were 4, 5, 25, and 29. Out of 30 samples, the T-RFLP patterns of 26 samples were similar. B, Hierarchical clustering analysis of microbiota of meconium based on T-RFLP pattern derived from HhaI and MspI digestion. The figure shows the phylogenetic relationships among 30 meconium samples. The x-axis shows the % of similarity and 1 - 30, indicates the sample number.