| Literature DB >> 28379454 |
Angela Moya-Pérez1, Pauline Luczynski1, Ingrid B Renes1, Shugui Wang1, Yuliya Borre1, C Anthony Ryan1, Jan Knol1, Catherine Stanton1, Timothy G Dinan1, John F Cryan1.
Abstract
Microbial colonization of the gastrointestinal tract is an essential process that modulates host physiology and immunity. Recently, researchers have begun to understand how and when these microorganisms colonize the gut and the early-life factors that impact their natural ecological establishment. The vertical transmission of maternal microbes to the offspring is a critical factor for host immune and metabolic development. Increasing evidence also points to a role in the wiring of the gut-brain axis. This process may be altered by various factors such as mode of delivery, gestational age at birth, the use of antibiotics in early life, infant feeding, and hygiene practices. In fact, these early exposures that impact the intestinal microbiota have been associated with the development of diseases such as obesity, type 1 diabetes, asthma, allergies, and even neurodevelopmental disorders. The present review summarizes the impact of cesarean birth on the gut microbiome and the health status of the developing infant and discusses possible preventative and restorative strategies to compensate for early-life microbial perturbations.Entities:
Keywords: cesarean section; immunity; metabolism; microbiota; prebiotics; probiotics
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28379454 PMCID: PMC5410982 DOI: 10.1093/nutrit/nuw069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Rev ISSN: 0029-6643 Impact factor: 7.110
Figure 1Cesarean section can alter colonization of the newborn intestine, which is a critical event influencing many developmental and physiological processes and, thereby, the functioning of the immune and neuroendocrine systems, with long-lasting effects on health. It is thought that an unhealthy microbiota can promote the increased translocation of pathogenic bacterial components from the intestinal mucosa to the systemic circulation, where they activate innate immunity characterized by production of proinflammatory cytokines, resulting in metabolic inflammation and abnormal gut function. Abbreviation: BBB, blood-brain barrier.
Summary of the impact of C-section on newborn health
| System | Effects | Specific changes | Specific changes in health condition/disorder/dysbiosis | Role of microbiota | Type of study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immune system dysregulation | Allergy | Allergic rhinitis and peripheral blood eosinophilia Atopic dermatitis | Inverse association of bacterial diversity in the early intestinal flora 1 and 12 mo after birth with the risk of allergic sensitization (serum-specific IgE; peripheral blood eosinophils and allergic rhinitis) Low prevalence of | Reduced bacterial diversity of the infants’ intestinal flora associated with an increased risk of allergic sensitization, allergic rhinitis, and peripheral blood eosinophilia Percentages of | Clinical | Bisgaard et al. (2011) |
| Clinical | Watanabe et al. (2003) | |||||
Asthma “Hygiene hypothesis” | Chronic inflammatory disease of the airways | Increased risk of asthma and atopy in children born by C-section; demonstrated using a combination of 2 methods: 1) evaluation of registers and questionnaire (symptoms in the child and the family) and 2) clinical examination (delivery history and general pediatric clinical examination) Higher risk of asthma in children born by C-section than those born by vaginal delivery, particularly the children of allergic parents Protection from development of allergic illnesses may be conferred by infections and unhygienic contacts | Decline of infections in Western countries coincides with the origin of increased incidence of autoimmune and allergic diseases Toll-like receptor stimulation can recapitulate the protective effect of infectious agents on allergy and autoimmunity Rise in reported allergy symptoms is not due to being too clean, but losing touch with “old friends” | Clinical | Kero et al. (2002) | |
| Clinical | Roduit et al. (2009) | |||||
| Clinical and preclinical evidences | von Mutius (2007) | |||||
| Autoimmune diseases | Type 1 diabetes | Risk of diabetes increased by late preterm birth (34–36 wk) and C-section delivery Higher risk of diabetes in offspring associated with increased maternal age 20% higher risk of childhood-onset type 1 diabetes after C-section delivery (from a meta-analysis of observational studies)Autoimmunity prevented by parenteral administration of multiple TLR agonists TLR-mediated effects involve immunoregulatory cytokines such as IL-10 and transforming growth factor-beta and different subsets of regulatory T cells Increased risk of immunoglobulin E-mediated food allergy associated with C-section delivery Protection from celiac disease associated with breastfeeding Celiac disease later in life positively associated with elective, but not emergency, cesarean delivery Lower total diversity of the microbiota in C-section compared with vaginally delivered infants throughout the first 2 years of life Lower diversity of the phylum Bacteroidetes in C-section-born infants during the first 2 years of life Increased circulating levels of Th1-associated chemokines during infancy (CXCL10 and CXCL11 in blood) associated with vaginal delivery Lower proportions of regulatory T cells, tolerogenic dendritic cells, and less IL-10 gene expression in mesenteric lymph nodes and spleens of C-section-born adult mice Several chronic immune diseases associated with cesarean delivery as an early-life environmental risk factor Increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease with cesarean delivery | Probiotics that stimulate TLRs also protect from autoimmune diseases Microbiota development in infants is affected by mode of delivery and relates | Clinical | Algert et al. (2009) | |
| Clinical | Cardwell et al. (2008) | |||||
| Preclinical (mouse) | Aumeunier et al. (2010) | |||||
| Clinical | Mezoff et al. (2013) | |||||
| Systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies | Akobeng et al. | |||||
| Clinical | Marild et al. (2012) | |||||
| Celiac disease | Clinical | Jakobsson et al. (2014) | ||||
Low levels of Th1 response and effects on the regulatory immune system Inflammatory bowel disease | differences in colonization patterns to the maturation of a balanced Th1/Th2 immune response | |||||
| Preclinical (mouse) | Hansen et al. (2014) | |||||
| Clinical Systematic review and meta-analysis | Sevelsted et al. (2015) | |||||
| Metabolic dysregulation | Obesity | Increased risk of childhood obesity in infants delivered by C-section, even after adjusting for maternal body mass index, birth weight, and other variables (prospective prebirth cohort study) Increased body mass in childhood and adolescence associated with cesarean delivery (longitudinal birth cohort study, following subjects up to 15 years of age) Higher numbers of bifidobacteria in fecal samples during infancy in children who remained at a normal weight than in children who became overweight Greater number of Fecal microbiota of C-section infants was dominated with Intestinal microbiota of C-section-delivered infants also characterized by an absence of | Deviations in gut microbiota may predispose to energy storage and obesity; therefore, early microbial differences may predict weight later in life Aberrant compositional development of the gut microbiota precedes becoming overweight. The large load of | Clinical (prospective prebirth cohort study) | Huh et al | |
| Clinical (longitudinal birth cohort study) | Blustein et al. (2013) | |||||
| Clinical | Kalliomaki et al. (2008) | |||||
| Clinical | Pandey et al. (2012) |
Abbreviations: C-section, cesarean section; IL, interleukin; TLR, toll-like receptor.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the main strategic points of intervention to reverse the effects of cesarean section delivery. This can be done by improving the environment through different hygienic habits and health practices. Alternatively, the intervention could be focused on the mother herself by using probiotics and/or prebiotics and/or polyunsaturated fatty acids during pregnancy. Finally, the intervention could focus on the newborn with “seeding” approaches: breastfeeding instead of formula feeding or the use of infant formulas enriched and improved with probiotics/prebiotics. This figure summarizes the current modulating therapies to improve the composition of the microbiota and neurodevelopmental health of the infant.
Summary of different strategies involved in restoration of the gut microbiota after C-section
| Strategy | Featured effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| “Vaginal seeding” | Vaginal seeding could successfully colonize C-section infants with vaginal bacteria | Dominguez-Bello et al. (2016), |
| Microbial environment | Green spaces/natural environments rapidly induce positive changes to the psychological, physiological, and endocrine systems; diminished exposure to them in the perinatal period may cause immunoregulatory and psychosocial deficits | Rook (2013) |
| Probiotic supplementation | Supplementation with probiotics can confer a plethora of beneficial effects in variety of disorders, eg, consumption of the commensal bacteria | Hill et al. (2014), |
| Prebiotic supplementation | Supplementation with prebiotics may represent a viable strategy to benefit the gut microbiota, immunity, metabolism, and gastrointestinal function of infants exposed to early-life microbial perturbation | Rastall et al. (2015), |
| Synbiotic supplementation | Supplementation with a combination of pre- and probiotics can have synergistic beneficial effects on the immune and metabolic system | Passeron et al. (2006), |
| Human milk feeding | Microbial establishment in the infant gut is influenced by the microbes present in breast milk | Diaz Heijtz (2016), |
| Specific infant formula feeding | Supplementation of infant milk formula with long-chain fatty acids may prevent and/or improve development of asthma, inhibit placental inflammation, and have implications for neural development - even potentially reversing the impact of early-life stress on the microbiota | Miles et al. (2014), |
| Human donor milk banks | Can be used as a possible alternative to maternal breastfeeding to improve neonatal health by supporting the safe use of human milk in preterm infants | Stevens et al. (2015), |