| Literature DB >> 30001517 |
Moran Yassour1, Eeva Jason2, Larson J Hogstrom3, Timothy D Arthur4, Surya Tripathi4, Heli Siljander5, Jenni Selvenius2, Sami Oikarinen6, Heikki Hyöty6, Suvi M Virtanen7, Jorma Ilonen8, Pamela Ferretti9, Edoardo Pasolli9, Adrian Tett9, Francesco Asnicar9, Nicola Segata9, Hera Vlamakis4, Eric S Lander10, Curtis Huttenhower11, Mikael Knip12, Ramnik J Xavier13.
Abstract
Bacterial community acquisition in the infant gut impacts immune education and disease susceptibility. We compared bacterial strains across and within families in a prospective birth cohort of 44 infants and their mothers, sampled longitudinally in the first months of each child's life. We identified mother-to-child bacterial transmission events and describe the incidence of family-specific antibiotic resistance genes. We observed two inheritance patterns across multiple species, where often the mother's dominant strain is transmitted to the child, but occasionally her secondary strains colonize the infant gut. In families where the secondary strain of B. uniformis was inherited, a starch utilization gene cluster that was absent in the mother's dominant strain was identified in the child, suggesting the selective advantage of a mother's secondary strain in the infant gut. Our findings reveal mother-to-child bacterial transmission events at high resolution and give insights into early colonization of the infant gut.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30001517 PMCID: PMC6091882 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2018.06.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023