Abstract

Environmental factors in early life interact with genetics to exert a long-lasting and broad influence on health and disease. There has been a marked growth in the number of environmental factors studied in association with neurodevelopmental disorders. Colonization of the gut microbiota in the offspring uses the maternal resident flora as a primary source of bacteria during perinatal periods. Several lines of evidence have shown that various environmental factors including the mode of delivery, exposure to antibiotics, infection, stress, diet, quality of breast milk, and type of infant-feeding during the perinatal periods can perturb the gut microbiota colonization in the offspring, finally leading to disturbances in brain development. This study proposes that the gut microbiota seeded primarily by maternal microbiota, and the postnatal colonization of the microbiota in the offspring can be critical action points of environmental factors when deciphering the mechanisms of actions of environmental factors in brain development. This research reviews the inheritance and colonization of the microbiota during early life and the potential actions of the environmental factors influencing brain development in the offspring by modulating the vertical transmission of gut microbiota.

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