Abstract

Vitamin A deficiency (VAD) remains a public health issue worldwide, affecting pregnant women and children. The early-life microbiota is a potentially effective intervention target for modulating immune and metabolic development of the host. This paper investigates the effects of VAD during different life periods on the structure of the colonic mucosa microbiota in adolescent rats. The results showed that the concentrations of serum retinol were > ~1.05 μmol/L in maternal VA normal (VAN)rats and < 0.7 μmol/L in maternal VAD rats, while the serum retinol levels were higher than 0.7 μmol/L in the pups of the VAN group and below 0.5 μmol/L in the pups of the VAD group. Compared to the offspring persistent with VAN from embryonic stage (group A), all the remaining groups exhibited an increased ratio of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes abundance. A metagenome analysis (LEfSe) and a differentially abundant features approach using Metastats for genus abundances revealed that Diaphorobacter and Psychrobacter were increased in the offspring persistent with VAD from embryonic stage (group B);Bifidobacterium was decreased and Staphylococcus was increased in the offspring with VAD after weaning (group C); Propionibacterium and Enterobacter were increased significantly in the offspring with VAD during gestation(group E); and Ochrobactrum was increased in group B and the offspring with VAD during gestation and lactation(group D). Faecalibacterium abundance was significantly and positively related to serum retinol levels, while that of Staphylococcus was significantly and negatively correlated with serum retinol levels. VAD in different life periods can alter the gut microbiome in rats, but VAD in the early-life periods (especially gestation and/or lactation) leads to a diversity of the colonic mucosal microbiota in adolescent rats as well as an imbalance of the ratio between Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. The early-life period may become a time window of VA intervention to improve intestinal microbiota caused by VA deficiency, but the specific mechanism requires more in-depth research.

Highlights

  • Vitamin A (VA) is an organic nutrient that is essential for human embryonic development and homeostasis [1]

  • When the serum retinol levels of blood samples taken from the tails of the maternal vitamin A deficiency (VAD) rats decreased to 0.7 μmol/L and those of the maternal VA normal (VAN) rats increased to 1.05 μmol/L, the female rats were mated with normal male rats

  • The retinol of the mother rats in the VAN group (>1.05 μmol/L)were significantly higher than those in the VAD group(

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Summary

Introduction

Vitamin A (VA) is an organic nutrient that is essential for human embryonic development and homeostasis [1]. Offspring fed a VAD diet showed obvious lymph node shrinkage and decreased immune response efficiency. Our previous studies have successfully constructed VAD and VA normal model in Sprague Dawley (SD) rats [4], and found that VAD rats during gestation can reduce the percentages of CD11c+ dendritic cells and CD4+CD25+ T lymphocytes in the intestinal Peyer’s patch of offspring and affect the homing of B cells in mesenteric lymph nodes and that VAD during earlylife stages of rats (gestation and lactation) can significantly reduce the proportion of CD8+ intestinal epithelial lymphocytes in pups [5]. VAD, especially during the early stages of life, has a significant impact on the growth and development of offspring

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