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Precocious infant fecal microbiome promotes enterocyte barrier dysfuction, altered neuroendocrine signaling and associates with increased childhood obesity risk.

Germaine J M YongCara E PorscheAlexandra R SitarikKei E FujimuraKathryn McCauleyDat T NguyenAlbert M LevinKimberley J WoodcroftDennis R OwnbyAndrew G RundleChristine C JohnsonAndrea Cassidy-BushrowSusan V Lynch
Published in: Gut microbes (2023)
Early life gut microbiome composition has been correlated with childhood obesity, though microbial functional contributions to disease origins remain unclear. Here, using an infant birth cohort ( n  = 349) we identify a distinct fecal microbiota composition in 1-month-old infants with the lowest rate of exclusive breastfeeding, that relates with higher relative risk for obesity and overweight phenotypes at two years. Higher-risk infant fecal microbiomes exhibited accelerated taxonomic and functional maturation and broad-ranging metabolic reprogramming, including reduced concentrations of neuro-endocrine signals. In vitro , exposure of enterocytes to fecal extracts from higher-risk infants led to upregulation of genes associated with obesity and with expansion of nutrient sensing enteroendocrine progenitor cells. Fecal extracts from higher-risk infants also promoted enterocyte barrier dysfunction. These data implicate dysregulation of infant microbiome functional development, and more specifically promotion of enteroendocrine signaling and epithelial barrier impairment in the early-life developmental origins of childhood obesity.
Keyphrases
  • early life
  • type diabetes
  • insulin resistance
  • weight gain
  • microbial community
  • physical activity
  • oxidative stress
  • adipose tissue
  • high fat diet induced
  • electronic health record
  • data analysis