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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30284
Title: From Birth to Three Years: The Relationship of Early-Life Exposures, Body Composition and the Gut Microbiome
Other Titles: Early Exposures, Body Composition and the Gut Microbiome
Authors: Carballo, Johan
Advisor: Schertzer, Jonathan
Department: Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences
Keywords: Infant Gut Microbiome;Longitudinal Cohort Study;Maternal Parity;Intrapartum Antibiotics;Body Composition;BMIz
Publication Date: 2024
Abstract: The gut microbiome is essential for immune system development and infant metabolic health. The first three years of life are critical for colonization and maturation of the infant gut microbiome. Our study involves 245 full-term, low-risk mother-infant pairs recruited by midwifery practices at McMaster University. It spanned from birth to three years, with data collected from birth records, study questionnaires, anthropometric measures, and stool samples processed via 16S rRNA sequencing. We investigated associations between the infant gut microbiome and [1] early-life exposures such as delivery place, maternal parity, and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis and [2] growth (BMIz) and body composition (FMI and LMI). We characterized the following aspects of the infant gut microbiome longitudinally over the first three years of life: (1) alpha diversity, within sample diversity, (2) beta diversity, among sample diversity, and (3) bacterial taxonomy. Our study reveals significant associations between early-life exposures and gut microbiome diversity during infancy. Infants delivered at home show elevated levels of Bacteroides at ten days postpartum. Parity is the strongest predictor of beta diversity variation, with infants showing higher levels of Bifidobacterium in their first year. Infants exposed to intrapartum antibiotics showed reduced Bifidobacterium and increased Streptococcus, which persisted for up to three years. Growth and body composition show minimal associations with gut microbiome diversity. BMIz, FMI and LMI are inversely related to alpha diversity at five months of age, but no associations existed at other timepoints. FMI and BMIz are associated with beta diversity at 12 weeks and 5 months, respectively. While the microbiota correlates with growth and body composition measures at five months, its predictive utility diminishes by three years, emphasizing the lasting association of early-life exposures on gut microbiome variation. Future work should focus on elucidating the underlying microbial mechanisms and developing microbiome-focused interventions aimed at improving infant health.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30284
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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