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Bacterial and Fungal Gut Community Dynamics Over the First 5 Years of Life in Predominantly Rural Communities in Ghana. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on understanding the bacterial and fungal microbiotas in rural Ghanaian children from birth to 5 years old, comparing them with their mothers' microbiotas.
  • Results showed that while bacterial communities changed in composition and diversity as children aged, the fungal microbiota remained stable; mothers also experienced a significant shift in their microbiota after giving birth.
  • The findings suggest that the differences in how infants and mothers share bacterial and fungal microbiotas could have important implications for health, indicating a need for more research on these dynamics.

Article Abstract

Background: Bacterial and fungal microbiotas are increasingly recognized as important in health and disease starting early in life. However, microbiota composition has not yet been investigated in most rural, low-resource settings, and in such settings, bacterial and fungal microbiotas have not been compared. Thus, we applied 16S and ITS2 amplicon sequencing, respectively, to investigate bacterial and fungal fecal microbiotas in rural Ghanaian children cross-sectionally from birth to 5 years of age. Corresponding maternal fecal and breast milk microbiotas were additionally investigated.

Results: While bacterial communities differed systematically across the age spectrum in composition and diversity, the same was not observed for the fungal microbiota. We also identified a novel and dramatic change in the maternal postpartum microbiota. This change included much higher abundance of and much lower abundance of in the first vs. fourth week postpartum. While infants shared more bacterial taxa with their mother's stool and breast milk than with those of unrelated mothers, there were far fewer shared fungal taxa.

Conclusion: Given the known ability of commensal fungi to influence host health, the distinct pattern of their acquisition likely has important health consequences. Similarly, the dynamics of mothers' bacterial microbiotas around the time of birth may have important consequences for their children's health. Both topics require further study.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8290483PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.664407DOI Listing

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