Microbiology Spectrum (Aug 2023)
Birth Mode Does Not Determine the Presence of Shared Bacterial Strains between the Maternal Vaginal Microbiome and the Infant Stool Microbiome
Abstract
ABSTRACT Dysbiosis of the neonatal gut microbiome during early life has been suggested as the missing link that may explain higher rates of certain diseases in caesarean section-delivered infants. Many studies report delivery mode-related dysbiosis in infants due to a lack of maternal vaginal microbiome exposure, prompting interventions to correct the neonatal gut microbiome by transferring these missing microbes after caesarean delivery. The maternal vaginal microbiome is among the first microbial exposures that many infants experience, yet little is known about the extent of direct transmission of maternal vaginal microbes. As part of the Maternal Microbiome Legacy Project, we aimed to determine if maternal vaginal bacteria are vertically transmitted to infants. We employed cpn60 microbiome profiling, culture-based screening, molecular strain typing, and whole-genome sequencing to determine whether identical maternal vaginal strains were present in infant stool microbiomes. We identified identical cpn60 sequence variants in both halves of maternal-infant dyads in 204 of 585 Canadian women and their newborn infants (38.9%). The same species of Bifidobacterium and Enterococcus were cultured from maternal and corresponding infant samples in 33 and 13 of these mother-infant dyads, respectively. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and whole-genome sequencing determined that near-identical strains were detected in these dyads irrespective of delivery mode, indicating an alternative source in cases of caesarean delivery. Overall, we demonstrated that vertical transmission of maternal vaginal microbiota is likely limited and that transmission from other maternal body sites, such as the gut and breast milk, may compensate for the lack of maternal vaginal microbiome exposure during caesarean delivery. IMPORTANCE The importance of the gut microbiome in human health and disease is widely recognized, and there has been a growing appreciation that alterations in gut microbiome composition during a “critical window” of development may impact health in later life. Attempts to correct gut microbiome dysbiosis related to birth mode are underpinned by the assumption that the lack of exposure to maternal vaginal microbes during caesarean delivery is responsible for dysbiosis. Here, we demonstrate that there is limited transmission of the maternal vaginal microbiome to the neonatal gut, even in cases of vaginal delivery. Furthermore, the presence of identical strains shared between mothers and infants in early life, even in cases of caesarean delivery, highlights compensatory microbial exposures and sources for the neonatal stool microbiome other than the maternal vagina.
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