Publications by authors named "Anna Robaczewska"

Parent-offspring interactions constitute the first contact of many newborns with their environment, priming community assembly of microbes through priority effects. Early exposure to microbes can have lasting influences on the assembly and functionality of the host's microbiota, leaving a life-long imprint on host health and disease. Studies of the role played by parental care in microbial acquisition have primarily focused on humans and hosts with agricultural relevance.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Researchers studied the vaginal microbiota and cytokines in women throughout pregnancy and for a year after childbirth, finding that delivery leads to inflammation and a loss of beneficial bacteria, specifically Lactobacillus.
  • - The study noted that neither the progression of pregnancy nor the approach of labor significantly affected the vaginal microbiome, while a high level of diversity in bacteria persisted long after delivery.
  • - A previous live birth was linked to lower chances of Lactobacillus dominance during subsequent pregnancies, which indicates that childbirth alters the vaginal ecosystem, affecting women's long-term health and future pregnancies.
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Motivation: Multiple biological clocks govern a healthy pregnancy. These biological mechanisms produce immunologic, metabolomic, proteomic, genomic and microbiomic adaptations during the course of pregnancy. Modeling the chronology of these adaptations during full-term pregnancy provides the frameworks for future studies examining deviations implicated in pregnancy-related pathologies including preterm birth and preeclampsia.

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Recent studies suggest that the microbiome has an impact on gestational health and outcome. However, characterization of the pregnancy-associated microbiome has largely relied on 16S rRNA gene amplicon-based surveys. Here, we describe an assembly-driven, metagenomics-based, longitudinal study of the vaginal, gut, and oral microbiomes in 292 samples from 10 subjects sampled every three weeks throughout pregnancy.

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Despite the critical role of the human microbiota in health, our understanding of microbiota compositional dynamics during and after pregnancy is incomplete. We conducted a case-control study of 49 pregnant women, 15 of whom delivered preterm. From 40 of these women, we analyzed bacterial taxonomic composition of 3,767 specimens collected prospectively and weekly during gestation and monthly after delivery from the vagina, distal gut, saliva, and tooth/gum.

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