| Literature DB >> 28946864 |
Marco Toscano1, Roberta De Grandi1, Diego Giampietro Peroni2, Enzo Grossi3, Valentina Facchin4, Pasquale Comberiati4, Lorenzo Drago5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breast milk is a rich nutrient with a temporally dynamic nature. In particular, numerous alterations in the nutritional, immunological and microbiological content occur during the transition from colostrum to mature milk. The objective of our study was to evaluate the potential impact of delivery mode on the microbiota of colostrum, at both the quantitative and qualitative levels (bacterial abundance and microbiota network).Entities:
Keywords: Auto contractive map; Bacteria; Breast milk; Colostrum; Microbiota; Network
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28946864 PMCID: PMC5613475 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-017-1109-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1Shannon, Simpson and Chao’s indices of C-section and vaginal delivery colostrum. Non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test was used to find significant differences in α diversity. No significant differences in biodiversity were observed, even if colostrum associated with natural delivery had a higher biodiversity compared to C-section colostrum
Fig. 2Significant differences in bacterial abundance between C-section and vaginal delivery colostrum (p value <0.05). Mann-Whitney test was used to find significant differences in microbial taxa between different samples. P-values below 0.05 were considered statistically significant
Fig. 3a Percentage distribution of aerobic and anaerobic bacterial genera in both C-section and vaginal delivery colostrum; b Relative abundance (total reads) of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria contained in colostrum samples
Fig. 4a Percentage of environmental bacterial genera contained in colostrum samples; b Percentage of intestinal bacterial genera in both C-section and vaginal delivery colostrum samples. To identify environmental bacteria in the colostrum microbiota we used different online free tools (see Methods) that allowed the characterization of the majority of microorganisms contained in colostrum
Fig. 5Microbiota network of C-section colostrum. Red circles represent all bacterial hubs identified in the colostrum microbiota. Microorganisms showing at least three connections with other microbes in the network were considered as the main bacterial hubs
Fig. 6Microbiota network of vaginal delivery colostrum. Red circles represent all bacterial hubs identified in the microbiota colostrum. Microorganisms showing at least three connections with other microbes in the network were considered as the main bacterial hubs
Characteristics of mother-newborn pairs based on the two mode of delivery. Data are expressed as mean (±SD)
| C-section delivery (15 pairs) | Vaginal delivery (14 pairs) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal age (yrs) | Mean (±SD) | 32,62 ± 5,11 | 29,5 ± 4,45 |
| Parity | Mean (±SD) | 1,67 ± 0,82 | 1,64 ± 0,5 |
| Gestational age (wks) | Mean (±SD) | 38,73 ± 2,49 | 39,5 ± 1,56 |
| Sex | 10 males | 10 Males | |
| 5 females | 4 Females | ||
| Birth weight (g) | Mean (±SD) | 3281,67 ± 685,56 | 3298,33 ± 600,72 |