| Literature DB >> 32968220 |
Mark A Underwood1, Sagori Mukhopadhyay2, Satyan Lakshminrusimha3, Charles L Bevins4.
Abstract
The initial colonization of the neonatal intestinal tract is influenced by delivery mode, feeding, the maternal microbiota, and a host of environmental factors. After birth, the composition of the infant's microbiota undergoes a series of significant changes particularly in the first weeks and months of life ultimately developing into a more stable and diverse adult-like population in childhood. Intestinal dysbiosis is an alteration in the intestinal microbiota associated with disease and appears to be common in neonates. The consequences of intestinal dysbiosis are uncertain, but strong circumstantial evidence and limited confirmations of causality suggest that dysbiosis early in life can influence the health of the infant acutely, as well as contribute to disease susceptibility later in life.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32968220 PMCID: PMC7509828 DOI: 10.1038/s41372-020-00829-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinatol ISSN: 0743-8346 Impact factor: 3.225
Fig. 1Neonatal intestinal dysbiosis and disease risk.
a Normal colonization of the infant gut is shaped by environmental factors, maternal microbes and breast milk (human milk oligosaccharides). Colonizing microbes influence development of the intestinal innate and adaptive immune systems. b Several factors result in dysbiosis increasing risk for neonatal conditions such as necrotizing enterocolitis and long-term health issues such as autoimmune diseases, atopy and obesity. Copyright Satyan Lakshminrusimha.
Fig. 2Contributors and consequences of intestinal dybiosis.
Factors influencing the intestinal microbiota in preterm and term infants are presented at the left and top of the figure with diseases associated with intestinal dybiosis to the right.
Alterations in the infant fecal microbiota related to perinatal exposures.
| Intervention | Change in the neonatal intestinal microbiota and metabolites |
|---|---|
| Intrapartum antibiotics [ | ↓ Bacteroides and Bacteroidetes |
| ↓ Parabacteroides | |
| ↓ Bifidobacterium and Actinobacteria | |
| ↑ Proteobacteria | |
| ↑ Veillonella, Enterococcus and Firmicutes | |
| ↑ Clostridia | |
| ↓ Alpha diversity | |
| ↓ Fecal acetate | |
| ↑ Antibiotic resistance genes | |
| Postnatal antibiotics (term infant) [ | ↓ Bacteroidetes |
| Postnatal antibiotics (preterm) [ | ↓ Alpha diversity |
| ↑ Antibiotic resistance genes | |
| Cesarean delivery [ | ↓ Actinobacteria |
| ↓ Bacteroidetes | |
| ↑ Firmicutes | |
| Home birth [ | ↑ Bifidobacterium |
| ↑ Bacteroides | |
| ↑ Streptococcus | |
| ↑ Lactobacillus | |
| ↓ Clostridium | |
| ↓ Enterobacteriaceae | |
| Very preterm birth [ | ↑ Proteobacteria |
| ↓ Firmicutes | |
| ↓ Bifidobacterium | |
| ↓ Short chain fatty acids | |
| Mother’s own milk [ | ↑ Bifidobacteriaceae |
| ↓ Staphylococcaceae | |
| ↓ Clostridiaceae | |
| ↓ Pasteurellaceae | |
| Maternal smoking [ | ↑ Ruminococcus |
| ↑ Akkermansia | |
| ↑ Bacteroides | |
| ↑ Staphylococcus | |
| Furry pet in the home [ | ↓ Streptococcaceae |
| ↑ Oscillospira and Ruminococcus | |
| Disinfectant [ | ↑ Lachnospiraceae |
| ↓ Haemophilus | |
| Eco-friendly disinfectant [ | ↓ Enterobacteriaceae |
Disease processes associated with intestinal dysbiosis.
| Acute/subacute | Chronic |
| Necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm infants | Type 1 diabetes |
| Late onset neonatal sepsis | Type 2 diabetes |
| Antibiotic associated diarrhea | Chronic kidney disease |
| Clostridium difficile colitis | Inflammatory bowel disease |
| Infant colic | Dyslipidemia |
| Severe acute malnutrition | Coronary artery disease |
| Breast cancer | |
| Colon cancer | |
| Atopic dermatitis | |
| Non-alcoholic fatty liver | |
| Parkinson’s disease | |
| Alzheimer’s disease | |
| Obesity | |
| Depression | |
| Schizophrenia |
Bacteria that produce short chain fatty acids and lactate.
| Genus (phylum) | SFCA |
|---|---|
| Bifidobacterium (Actinobacteria) | Acetate, lactate |
| Akkermansia (Verrucomicrobia) | Acetate, propionate |
| Faecalibacterium (Firmicutes) | Butyrate |
| Clostridium (Firmicutes) | Butyrate |
| Eubacterium (Firmicutes) | Butyrate |
| Roseburia (Firmicutes) | Butyrate |
| Bacteroides (Bacteroidetes) | Acetate, propionate |
| Lactobacillus (Firmicutes) | Lactate |