| Literature DB >> 31409852 |
Tinu Mary Samuel1, Aristea Binia1, Carlos Antonio de Castro2, Sagar K Thakkar1, Claude Billeaud3, Massimo Agosti4, Isam Al-Jashi5, Maria Jose Costeira6, Giovanna Marchini7, Cecilia Martínez-Costa8, Jean-Charles Picaud9, Tom Stiris10, Silvia-Maria Stoicescu11, Mireille Vanpeé7, Magnus Domellöf12, Sean Austin1, Norbert Sprenger13.
Abstract
Human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) composition varies among lactating mothers and changes during the course of lactation period. Interindividual variation is largely driven by fucosyltransferase (FUT2 and FUT3) polymorphisms resulting in 4 distinct milk groups. Little is known regarding whether maternal physiological status contributes to HMO variability. We characterized the trajectories of 20 major HMOs and explored whether maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (ppBMI), mode of delivery, or parity may affect milk HMO composition. Using longitudinal breastmilk samples from healthy mothers (n = 290) across 7 European countries, we characterized HMO composion and employed mixed linear models to explore associations of maternal characteristics with individual HMOs. We observed HMO-specific temporal trajectories and milk group dependencies. We observed relatively small but significant differences in HMO concentrations based on maternal ppBMI, mode of delivery and parity. Our findings suggest that HMO composition to be regulated time-dependently by an enzyme as well as substrate availability and that ppBMI, mode of delivery, and parity may influence maternal physiology to affect glycosylation marginally within the initital period of lactation. Our observational study is the largest European standardized and longitudinal (up to 4 months) milk collection study assessing HMO concentrations and basic maternal characteristics. Time of lactation and milk groups had the biggest impact on HMO variation. Future studies need to elucidate these observations and assess the physiological significance for the breastfed infant.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31409852 PMCID: PMC6692355 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-48337-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study design and flow. *Detailed information in the Supplementary Information.
Demographic and maternal characteristics.
| Total number of participants | Milk group 1 | Milk group 2 | Milk group 3 | Milk group 4 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proxies |
| POS-POS | NEG-POS | POS-NEG | NEG-NEG | ||
| 290 | 209 (72.0) | 51 (17.6) | 20 (6.9) | 10 (3.5) | |||
| Country n (%) |
| 9 | 5 (55.6) | 4 (44.4) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0.005 |
|
| 83 | 65 (78.3) | 9 (10.8) | 7 (8.4) | 2 (2.4) | ||
|
| 13 | 6 (46.2) | 4 (30.8) | 2 (15.4) | 1 (7.7) | ||
|
| 10 | 9 (90.0) | 1 (10.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
|
| 95 | 54 (56.8) | 28 (29.5) | 9 (9.5) | 4 (4.2) | ||
|
| 40 | 35 (87.5) | 2 (5.0) | 1 (2.5) | 2 (5.0) | ||
|
| 40 | 35 (87.5) | 3 (7.5) | 1 (2.5) | 1 (2.5) | ||
| Infant sex n (%) |
| 130 (44.8) | 99 (47.4) | 19 (37.3) | 9 (45.0) | 3 (30.0) | 0.454 |
|
| 160 (55.2) | 110 (52.6) | 32 (62.7) | 11 (55.0) | 7 (70.0) | ||
| Mean prepregancy weight in kg (SD) | 61.68 (7.73) | 61.64 (7.59) | 61.43 (8.49) | 62.27 (7.00) | 62.80 (9.21) | 0.944 | |
| Mean prepregnancy height in cm (SD) | 164.88 (6.00) | 165.31 (5.83) | 163.42 (5.91) | 162.62 (7.14) | 167.97 (5.71) | 0.022 | |
| Mean prepregnancy BMI (SD) | 22.69 (2.61) | 22.55 (2.50) | 23.01 (3.00) | 23.59 (2.61) | 22.20 (2.63) | 0.254 | |
| Prepregnancy BMI (%) |
| 229 (79.0) | 172 (82.3) | 37 (72.5) | 13 (65.0) | 7 (70.0) | 0.139 |
|
| 61 (21.0) | 37 (17.7) | 14 (27.5) | 7 (35.0) | 3 (30.0) | ||
| Mean weight loss postpartum in kg (SD) | 10.11 (4.55) | 10.10 (4.81) | 10.34 (3.76) | 9.43 (4.51) | 10.68 (3.63) | 0.895 | |
| Mean age (SD) | 31.20 (4.16) | 30.98 (4.04) | 32.08 (4.39) | 31.10 (4.66) | 31.50 (4.48) | 0.405 | |
| Mode of delivery n (%) |
| 72 (24.8) | 54 (25.8) | 10 (19.6) | 6 (30.0) | 2 (20.0) | 0.736 |
|
| 218 (75.2) | 155 (74.2) | 41 (80.4) | 14 (70.0) | 8 (80.0) | ||
| Parity n (%) |
| 215 (74.1) | 158 (75.6) | 32 (62.7) | 16 (80.0) | 9 (90.0) | 0.632 |
| > | 51 (24.4) | 19 (37.3) | 4 (20.0) | 1 (10.0) | |||
|
| 58 (20.0) | 38 (18.2) | 15 (29.4) | 4 (20.0) | 1 (10.0) | ||
|
| 16 (5.5) | 12 (5.7) | 4 (7.8) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
|
| 1 (0.3) | 1 (0.5) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||
| Mean gestational age, weeks (SD) | 39.38 (1.19) | 39.35 (1.17) | 39.25 (1.23) | 39.90 (1.25) | 39.60 (1.17) | 0.181 |
Figure 2The name and structure of the analysed oligosaccharides. Monosaccharides composing the oligosaccharides: Glc, glucose; Gal, galactose; GlcNAc, N-acetyl-glucosamine; GalNAc, N-acetyl-galactosamine; NeuAc, N-acetyl-neuraminic acid.
Figure 3Trajectories of HMO concentrations during the first 4 months of lactation separated by milk group. The solid lines represent the smoothing curves via local polynomial regression (LOESS – Locally Weighted Scatter-plot Smoother) and the shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval. (Details on statistical differences between milk groups can be found in Supplementary Table 6).
Figure 4HMO profile distribution by milk group and visit as sum of the quantified HMOs.
Figure 5HMO concentration over time by mode of delivery.