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Browsing by Subject "Infant microbiome"

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  • Wei, Xiaodong (2022)
    The composition and dynamics of the early life gut microbiota plays a major role in establishing neonatal immunity and is suggested to have multiple impacts on the child’s long-term health. Meanwhile, the composition of the infant gut microbiome has been shown to be affected by the birth mode, infant health and diet. However, the characterization of the infant gut microbiome and its impact on the host’s health is still challenging as the contribution and importance of multiple co-factors on the early microbiome during infant growth is still poorly understood and characterized. The Health and Early-life microbiota (HELMi) is a cohort of more than 1000 healthy Finnish infants currently followed from birth to 4-5 years old. By now, the HELMi dataset comprises more than 400 whole genome shotgun metagenomes obtained from stool samples from 80 infants and parents, but also an in-depth characterization of the families’ lifestyle, environment, health and nutrition, allowing for a precise and cutting-edge characterization of the early gut microbiota. Based on the datasets from the HELMi, this project used Metaphlan3, Kraken and Braken to determine the best computational approach for the taxonomic profiling of the metagenomic reads. Then a PERMANOVA test was performed to evaluate and determine the factors significantly associated with the compositional microbiota variation within the infant gut metagenomes. This study first identified technical factors introducing bias in taxonomic profiling (e.g., DNA extraction batch), which served as confounders in the analysis of environmental and host variables. The investigation of these biological factors indicates that pre-natal and peri-natal variables such as the mode of delivery significantly impact the infant gut microbiota, while we did not identify any significant impact of breastfeeding habits and medication exposures in this study.