| Literature DB >> 29981583 |
Donald D Nyangahu1,2, Katie S Lennard3, Bryan P Brown4,2, Matthew G Darby1, Jerome M Wendoh1, Enock Havyarimana1, Peter Smith1, James Butcher5, Alain Stintzi5, Nicola Mulder3, William Horsnell1,6,7, Heather B Jaspan8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early life microbiota is an important determinant of immune and metabolic development and may have lasting consequences. The maternal gut microbiota during pregnancy or breastfeeding is important for defining infant gut microbiota. We hypothesized that maternal gut microbiota during pregnancy and breastfeeding is a critical determinant of infant immunity. To test this, pregnant BALB/c dams were fed vancomycin for 5 days prior to delivery (gestation; Mg), 14 days postpartum during nursing (Mn), or during gestation and nursing (Mgn), or no vancomycin (Mc). We analyzed adaptive immunity and gut microbiota in dams and pups at various times after delivery.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29981583 PMCID: PMC6035804 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-018-0511-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Maternal oral vancomycin profoundly alters pup intestinal microbiota composition. a Experimental setup: BALB/C mice received oral vancomycin (1 mg/mL) for 5 days prior to delivery (gestation: Mg), 14 days after delivery (nursing: Mn), or 5 days prior to delivery through 14 days of nursing (gestation plus nursing: Mgn). Control mice (Mc) were not exposed to vancomycin. Fecal samples were collected from both mothers and their offspring 14 days postpartum. b Shannon index of pup fecal microbiotas of pups born to control (Pc: brown), Mgn (Pgn: blue), Mg (Pg: gray), or Mn (Pn: yellow) dams. Boxplot shows 25th and 75th percentiles with a line at the median. c Principal coordinate analysis of pups’ fecal microbial β-diversity based on Bray-Curtis dissimilarity. d Significantly different taxa abundances at phylum level in pup fecal microbiota communities after centered log ratio data transformation (Kruskal-Wallis and Mann Whitney U test). e Significantly differentially abundant OTUs in pup fecal microbiota obtained from both MetagenomeSeq and Deseq2 analyses performed on data merged at the lowest taxonomic level. B. ovatus: Bacteroides ovatus, P. distasonis: Parabacteroides distasonis, B. acidifaciens: Bacteroides acidifaciens, C. mastitidis: Corynebacterium mastitidis, R. gnavus: Ruminococcus gnavus, E. casseliflavus: Enterococcus casseliflavus. Results were combined from two independent experiments. n = 6–10 pups per group per experiment. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001
Fig. 2Maternal gut microbiota indirectly impacts genital tract and breastmilk microbiota. a Experimental setup: BALB/c mice were treated with vancomycin 5 days prior to delivery (Mg) or left untreated (Mc). Four days after delivery, mice were sacrificed and genital tract samples collected for 16S rRNA gene analysis. Stomach contents were also collected from pups’ stomach for microbiome analysis. b Shannon index of Mg (blue) versus Mc (red) genital tract microbiota. c Shannon index of stomach contents microbiota (collected from pups’ stomach 4 days after delivery). d Principal coordinate analysis of stomach contents microbiota day 4 postpartum by Bray-Curtis dissimilarity. e Shannon index of stomach contents microbiota collected from pups’ stomachs 14 days after delivery. f Principal coordinate analysis of stomach contents microbiota by Bray-Curtis dissimilarity collected 14 days after delivery. g Bayesian estimates of the proportion of microbes in pup stool that came from the mother. Error bars represent standard error of the mean (SEM). Data representative of two independent experiments. n = 4–6 breastmilk/2 genital tract samples per group per experiment. *p < 0.05
Fig. 3Maternal oral vancomycin impacts spleen cellularity at 14 days postpartum. Pups born to vancomycin breeders were sacrificed 14 days postpartum and their spleen lymphocyte populations characterized by FACS. a Total spleen cell counts of Pc (brown), Pgn (blue), Pg (gray), and Pn (yellow). b Proportions and c numbers of CD3+ cells that are CD4+. d Representative flow plot of effector and central memory CD4+ T cell subsets in spleen of Pc versus Pgn, gated from CD4+ population. Frequency of CD3+CD4+ that are e CD44hiCD62Lhi (central memory CD4 T cells) and f CD44hiCD62Llo (effector memory CD4 T cells). Graphs shown as mean ± SEM. Data are representative of two independent experiments. n = 6–10 pups per group. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Kruskal-Wallis test followed by Mann-Whitney U test
Fig. 4Maternal oral vancomycin impacts infant and maternal B cell compartments. Pups born to vancomycin breeders were sacrificed 14 days postpartum and their inherent spleen immunity characterized by FACS. Total IgM and IgG was measured in offspring sera and maternal breastmilk 14 days postpartum. a, b Proportion and absolute counts for total B cells. c Representative flow plot of Marginal and Follicular B cell subsets in spleen of Pc versus Pn. d, e Frequencies and numbers of Follicular B cells in infant spleen. f, g Frequencies and numbers of Marginal zone B cells in infant spleen. f Total IgM in infant serum 14 days postpartum. h, i Total IgM and IgG respectively in maternal breastmilk (collected from pup’s stomach), 14 days postpartum. j Serum levels of lipocalin-2 in pup serum at 14 days postpartum. Graphs shown as mean ± SEM. Data are representative of two independent experiments. n = 6–10 pups per groups. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Kruskal-Wallis test followed by Mann-Whitney U test