| Literature DB >> 32454840 |
Lalit Bharadia1, Neha Agrawal2, Nandan Joshi2.
Abstract
The human gut is colonized by trillions of bacteria as well as other microorganisms, collectively referred to as the "gut microflora." This microflora plays an important role in metabolism as well as immunity, and alterations in its normal composition and pattern of colonization can disturb the development and functioning of the immune system, predisposing the individual to several diseases. Neonates acquire their gut microflora from the mother as well as the surroundings, and as the infant grows, the gut microflora undergoes several changes, ultimately acquiring an adult-like composition. Characterization of the gut microflora of healthy infants is important to protect infants from infectious diseases. Furthermore, formulation of prebiotics and probiotics for boosting infant immunity in a specific population also requires prior knowledge of the normal gut microflora in a healthy infant in that population. To this end, several studies have been performed on Western infants; however, the gut microflora of Indian infants is as yet insufficiently studied. Moreover, there has been no comparative analysis of the development and characteristics of the infant gut microflora between the two populations. In this review, we discuss the development and maturation of the infant gut microflora and its effect on immunity, as well as the factors affecting the patterns of colonization. In addition, we compare the patterns of colonization of gut microflora between Western and Indian infants based on the available literature in an attempt to identify the extent of similarity or difference between the two populations.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32454840 PMCID: PMC7229554 DOI: 10.1155/2020/7586264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Evolution of the gut microflora in Western breastfed infants [1, 14, 55, 57, 58].
| Phase of infancy | Family/genus/species | Phylum | Aerobic/anaerobic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial phase of bacterial acquisition (first 1-2 weeks after birth) | Immediately after birth |
| Proteobacteria | Facultative anaerobe |
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe | ||
| Subsequently |
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe | |
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe/microaerophile | ||
| Postnatal day 4-7 |
| Bacteroidetes | Obligate anaerobe | |
|
| Actinobacteria | Anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Obligate anaerobe | ||
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| Remaining period of exclusive breastfeeding (up to approximately 4 months of age) |
| Actinobacteria | Anaerobe | |
|
| Proteobacteria | Facultative anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe | ||
|
| Bacteroidetes | Obligate anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Obligate anaerobe | ||
|
| ||||
| From introduction of solid food (4-6 months of age) to cessation of breastfeeding (around 1 year of age) | Enterobacteriaceae | Proteobacteria | Facultative anaerobe | |
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe | ||
|
| Bacteroidetes | Obligate anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Obligate anaerobe | ||
| Anaerobic | Firmicutes | Anaerobe | ||
|
| Actinobacteria | Anaerobe | ||
|
| Firmicutes | Facultative anaerobe/microaerophile | ||
|
| ||||
| After completion of weaning (approximately 2 years of age) | Gut microflora begins to resemble that of adults | |||
Summary of studies investigating the gut microflora in Indian infants.
| Authors | Year | Study population | Location | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albert et al. [ | 1977 | South Indian infants aged 1-20 months | Vellore, Tamil Nadu | (i) The normal gut microflora was predominantly anaerobic; bifidobacteria were the most abundant microbes |
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| Balamurugan et al. [ | 2008 | South Indian children aged 2-3 years | Vellore, Tamil Nadu | (i) Bifidobacteria were the most abundant gut bacteria |
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| Balamurugan et al. [ | 2010 | Term-born neonates in a tertiary care hospital in southern India | Vellore, Tamil Nadu | Enterobacteria ( |
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| Pandey et al. [ | 2012 | Full-term, breastfed infants | Pune, Maharashtra | (i) Gut microflora of vaginally born infants on postnatal day 7 was dominated by |
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| Sharma et al. [ | 2012 | Full-term infants around 4 weeks of age | New Delhi | (i) Predominant aerobic organisms: |
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| Kabeerdoss et al. [ | 2013 | Term-born infants in a south Indian hospital followed up from birth till 6 months of age | Vellore, Tamil Nadu | (i) Enterobacteria and lactobacilli were the predominant gut bacteria in the first 2 days of life |
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| Dinh et al. [ | 2016 | Persistently stunted (cases) and normal children (controls) from a birth cohort in a south Indian slum community followed up from birth till 2 years of age | Vellore, Tamil Nadu | (i) Firmicutes (38.6%) and Proteobacteria (25.89%) were the most abundant bacteria in the overall cohort, followed by Actinobacteria (17.5%), Bacteroidetes (13.8%), and Verrucomicrobia |
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| Chandel et al. [ | 2017 | Full-term, cesarean-born infants | Odisha | (i) Firmicutes (28%; |
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| Attri et al. [ | 2018 | Vaginally born, exclusively breastfed, full-term infants | Solan and Shimla, Himachal Pradesh | (i) First and second months of life: facultative anaerobic bacteria (Firmicutes and Proteobacteria) predominated |
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| Attri et al. [ | 2018 | Full-term, vaginally born, exclusively breastfed infants | Solan, Himachal Pradesh | (i) In the first 4 months of life, |