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Browsing by Subject "Gut microbiome"

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  • Lalli, Marianne (2024)
    Background: The infant gut microbiome undergoes major temporal changes in the first year of life, crucial for supporting normal development and long-term health. The immense diversity of fiber structures in breast milk and later in solid foods pose unique selection pressures on the gut microbiome maturation by providing novel substrates for the microbiota. However, the longitudinal impact of complementary food-derived fibers on the taxonomic and functional maturation of the gut microbiome during the gradual transition from breast milk to solid foods is not well understood. Objectives: My objective was to examine how breast milk, its fiber and complementary food fibers in the broader context of overall infant diet may affect the gut microbiome bacterial species composition and support age-appropriate gut bacterial maturation trajectories during first year of life. Methods: Longitudinal and cross-sectional development of 68 infant gut microbiomes and 33 metabolomes were examined with linear mixed models to determine the impact of infant nutrition on gut microbiome taxa and functional development. Nutrition assessments were based on detailed quantitative weighted 3-day food records (months 3,6,9,12) and the intakes of total dietary fiber with its food sources and fiber fractions relied on current internationally approved CODEX-compliant values. Questionnaires were utilized to monitor when various complementary foods were introduced, enabling more comprehensive nutritional analyses. Bacterial species identification was based on MetaPhlAn2 quantification of bacterial species from metagenomic data and metabolomic profiles were generated using four liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) methods. Results: My examinations place the previously described sequential trajectories in infant gut microbiome maturation into detailed fiber-dependent nutritional context relying on metagenomic species identification. I discovered 176 complementary food derived fiber-bacterial species associations. The majority of the associations (147, 84%) were positive whereas breastfeeding and related variables tended to be inversely associated with the same species, showing strongest inverse correlations to later trajectory species indicative of slower maturation. Both bacterial species and metabolomic profiles displayed pronounced longitudinal shifts in response to solid food fibers. Each introduction of novel dietary source of fiber associated to diversification of the microbiome revealing fiber-species specific temporal patterns. Conclusions: The longitudinal analyses highlight that sufficient fiber intake from appropriate sources during the weaning period likely function to build capacity for the species permanence in the more diverse and stable mature gut microbiome composition and function reached in later childhood.
  • Donner, Thomas (2020)
    Research into the gut microbiome has increased in recent decades, in part due to advances in sequencing technologies. A number of different disease processes appear to be linked to disturbances in the microbiome and an increase in intestinal permeability. Thus, different methods of modulating the microbiome and intestinal permeability are of great interest when considering future treatment options for several diseases. The experimental part of this thesis examines the effects of a bacterial strain (Bacteroides Vulgatus) on intestinal permeability using a CaCo-2 cell model. The bacterial strain was chosen because previous research has suggested it has the ability to reduce production of interleukin-8 (IL-8). A reduced production of IL-8 is believed to have anti-inflammatory effects and possibly a positive effect on intestinal permeability.The literature review section of the thesis discusses the relationship between disturbances in the microbiome, increased intestinal permeability and inflammatory reactions, as well as possible ways to modulate these processes. Factors that may affect intestinal permeability are briefly discussed with special emphasis placed on dietary factors. Spondyloarthropathies are discussed as an example of a disease group with possible links to a disturbed microbiome and an increase in intestinal permeability. The results from the experimental part of this thesis suggest that the studied strain of B.vulgatus does not have any appreciable effect on intestinal permeability and is thus unlikely to be used for future therapeutic treatments targeting the microbiome.