Sensitive Quantitative Analysis of the Meconium Bacterial Microbiota in Healthy Term Infants Born Vaginally or by Cesarean Section

For decades, babies were thought to be born germ-free, but recent evidences suggest that they are already exposed to various bacteria . However, the data on population levels of such pioneer gut bacteria, particularly in context to birth mode, is sparse. We herein aimed to quantify such bacteria fro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in microbiology 2016-12, Vol.7, p.1997-1997
Hauptverfasser: Nagpal, Ravinder, Tsuji, Hirokazu, Takahashi, Takuya, Kawashima, Kazunari, Nagata, Satoru, Nomoto, Koji, Yamashiro, Yuichiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:For decades, babies were thought to be born germ-free, but recent evidences suggest that they are already exposed to various bacteria . However, the data on population levels of such pioneer gut bacteria, particularly in context to birth mode, is sparse. We herein aimed to quantify such bacteria from the meconium of 151 healthy term Japanese infants born vaginally or by C-section. Neonatal first meconium was obtained within 24-48 h of delivery; RNA was extracted and subjected to reverse-transcription-quantitative PCR using specific primers for group, subgroup, group, cluster, , , , Enterobacteriaceae, , , , , and . We detected several bacterial groups in both vaginally- and cesarean-born infants. group, Enterobacteriaceae, , , and were detected in more than 50% of infants, with counts ranging from 10 to 10 cells/g sample. About 30-35% samples harbored and (10 -10 cells/g); whereas group, subgroup and were detected in 10-20% infants (10 -10 cells/g). Compared to vaginally-born babies, cesarean-born babies were significantly less often colonized with genus (6% vs. 37%; = 0.01) and subgroup (6% vs. 31%; = 0.04). Overall, seven subgroups/species, i.e., subgroup, subgroup, subgroup, subgroup, subgroup, subgroup, and were detected in the samples from vaginally-born group, whereas only two members, i.e., subgroup and were detected in the cesarean group. These data corroborate that several bacterial clades may already be present before birth in term infants' gut. Further, lower detection rate of lactobacilli in cesarean-born babies suggests that the primary source of lactobacilli in infant gut is mainly from maternal vaginal and-to a lesser extent-anal microbiota during vaginal delivery, and that the colonization by some important species is delayed in babies delivered via cesarean-section.
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2016.01997