Pregnant Woman鈥檚 Diet and Birth Mode Affect Infant鈥檚 Gut Microbiome, Study Shows

Communities of bacteria, called microbiomes, thrive everywhere in and on the human body. The digestive tract is just one of the places where bacteria 鈥 some dangerous, but most of them helpful 鈥 live.

Hilary Morrison Hilary Morrison, senior scientist in the MBL's Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution. Credit: Tom Kleindinst

In infants, gut bacteria are known to play a major role in development of the immune system and in their overall health. Now, there is evidence that a pregnant woman鈥檚 diet, as well as how her baby is delivered (vaginally or via cesarean section), can have a direct effect on the types and abundance of bacteria that populate her infant鈥檚 gut.

The study, published in听,听was co-authored by 澳门六合彩appSenior Scientist Hilary Morrison and led by scientists at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire.听Morrison听and 澳门六合彩appDistinguished Scientist听Mitchell L. Sogin听contributed their expertise in DNA sequencing to the study.

The team analyzed bacteria in the stool of 145 infants and compared it to their mothers鈥 diets during pregnancy. The babies鈥 gut microbiomes, they found, were dominated by four groups of bacteria, which, in the right abundance, have co-evolved with humans to aid in digestion:听Enterobacteriaceae,听Bifidobacterium,Bacteroides听and听Streptococcus.

Women who ate more red and processed meat had higher levels of听Bifidobacterium听in their babies鈥 guts than was found in the babies of women who ate more fruit. The babies of the fruit eaters also had more听Streptococcus听and听Clostridium听in their guts, bacteria which, in overabundance, can be pathogenic.

Surprisingly, the study revealed that with the same maternal food intake, some bacterial groups increased in abundance if children were delivered vaginally but decreased if they were delivered by c-section. This indicated that delivery mode had a more significant effect on the babies鈥 microbiome than researchers suspected.

Within the group of babies delivered by c-section, researchers found that babies of mothers who consumed more dairy products during pregnancy had a greater relative abundance of听Clostridium听compared to听Bifidobacterium听and other milk-digesting bacteria. This may be of concern because in high levels,听Clostridium听is a potential pathogen. The low relative abundance of dairy-digesting bacteria and high abundance of听Clostridium听could be related to an infant鈥檚 potential to develop lactose intolerance or dairy allergies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very satisfying to work on a project that might improve human health, especially when looking at the microbiomes of babies and mothers,鈥 says Morrison. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 going to be really interesting to find out how much the infant and mother鈥檚 microbiomes have to do with food tolerances later in life."

The researchers also suspect that some differences in infants鈥 gut microbiomes were due to differences in the composition of breast milk in their mothers, since more than 70 percent of infants in the study were exclusively breastfed.

Morrison and Sogin used two sequencing approaches to identify the types and relative numbers of bacterial species in the infants鈥 stool samples. One method quantifies the bacteria in a sample by targeting just one gene that all types of bacteria have (the 16S rRNA gene). In the other approach (shotgun metagenomics), the entire collection of bacterial DNA in the sample is randomly sequenced.

鈥淲e looked at both 16s rRNA tag sequencing and shotgun metagenomics, which is a much harder set of data to make sense of, but it鈥檚 a lot richer too, because you鈥檙e looking at all of the bacterial genes,鈥 Morrison says.

The study is part of Dartmouth College鈥檚听. The center鈥檚 mission is to address the health impacts of early life environmental exposures to prevent prevalent and life-threatening diseases in children.

The 澳门六合彩appresearchers worked closely with two principal investigators from the center,听听and听听and the study鈥檚 lead author, Sara Lundgren.