Abstract

BackgroundDisturbances in the early establishment of the intestinal microbiota may produce important implications for the infant’s health and for the risk of disease later on. Different perinatal conditions may be affecting the development of the gut microbiota. Some of them, such as delivery mode or feeding habits, have been extensively assessed whereas others remain to be studied, being critical to identify their impact on the microbiota and, if any, to minimize it. Antibiotics are among the drugs most frequently used in early life, the use of intrapartum antimicrobial prophylaxis (IAP), present in over 30% of deliveries, being the most frequent source of exposure. However, our knowledge on the effects of IAP on the microbiota establishment is still limited. The aim of the present work was to evaluate the impact of IAP investigating a cohort of 40 full-term vaginally delivered infants born after an uncomplicated pregnancy, 18 of which were born from mothers receiving IAP.ResultsFecal samples were collected at 2, 10, 30, and 90 days of age. We analyzed the composition of the fecal microbiota during the first 3 months of life by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and quantified fecal short chain fatty acids by gas chromatography. The presence of genes for resistance to antibiotics was determined by PCR in the samples from 1-month-old infants. Our results showed an altered pattern of intestinal microbiota establishment in IAP infants during the first weeks of life, with lower relative proportions of Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes and increased of Preoteobacteria and Firmicutes. A delay in the increase on the levels of acetate was observed in IAP infants. The analyses of specific antibiotic resistance genes showed a higher occurrence of some β-lactamase coding genes in infants whose mothers received IAP.ConclusionsOur results indicate an effect of IAP on the establishing early microbiota during the first months of life, which represent a key moment for the development of the microbiota-induced host homeostasis. Understanding the impact of IAP in the gut microbiota development is essential for developing treatments to minimize it, favoring a proper gut microbiota development in IAP-exposed neonates.

Highlights

  • Disturbances in the early establishment of the intestinal microbiota may produce important implications for the infant’s health and for the risk of disease later on

  • On the contrary to that observed for Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, the relative proportions of Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and others were higher in control than in intrapartum antimicrobial prophylaxis (IAP)-exposed infants (Fig. 1)

  • This study underlines the effect of maternal IAP on the process of establishment of the intestinal microbiota in the newborn

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Summary

Introduction

Disturbances in the early establishment of the intestinal microbiota may produce important implications for the infant’s health and for the risk of disease later on. An increasing amount of scientific evidence has underlined the important role of the early-life gut microbiota establishment and the development of such microbiota, in the later health of the individual [2,3,4,5,6]. This early microbiota-host interaction affects not just the local gut environment and distal organs [7, 8]. An aberrant early microbiota has been found to precede the development of diseases [9,10,11]

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