Does entry to center-based childcare affect gut microbial colonization in young infants?

Show full item record



Permalink

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/318396

Citation

Hermes , G D A , Eckermann , H A , de Vos , W M & de Weerth , C 2020 , ' Does entry to center-based childcare affect gut microbial colonization in young infants? ' , Scientific Reports , vol. 10 , no. 1 , 10235 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-66404-z

Title: Does entry to center-based childcare affect gut microbial colonization in young infants?
Author: Hermes, Gerben D. A.; Eckermann, Henrik A.; de Vos, Willem M.; de Weerth, Carolina
Contributor organization: Department of Bacteriology and Immunology
Willem Meindert Vos de / Principal Investigator
de Vos & Salonen group
Research Programs Unit
HUMI - Human Microbiome Research
Faculty of Medicine
University of Helsinki
Date: 2020-06-24
Language: eng
Number of pages: 13
Belongs to series: Scientific Reports
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-66404-z
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/318396
Abstract: Entry to center-based childcare (CC) at three months of life can be an important challenge for infants as it includes major stressors such as long maternal separations and frequently changing caregivers. Stress and the new environment may in turn alter the composition of the gut microbiota with possible implications for future health outcomes. As part of an ongoing longitudinal study, we investigated whether CC, as compared to being cared for by the parents at home, alters the composition of the gut microbiota, while accounting for known covariates of the infant gut microbiota. Stool samples of infants who entered CC (n=49) and control infants (n=49) were obtained before and four weeks after CC entrance. Using Redundancy analysis, Random Forests and Bayesian linear models we found that infant gut microbiota was not affected in a uniform way by entry to CC. In line with the literature, breastfeeding, birth mode, age, and the presence of siblings were shown to significantly impact the microbial composition.
Subject: MATERNAL SEPARATION
INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA
BRAIN
HEALTH
CORTISOL
BEHAVIOR
STRESS
SUCCESSION
IMPUTATION
BACTERIAL
1182 Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


Files in this item

Total number of downloads: Loading...

Files Size Format View
s41598_020_66404_z.pdf 3.955Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record