Environment International (Nov 2024)

The role of early life factors and green living environment in the development of gut microbiota in infancy: Population-based cohort study

  • Minka Ovaska,
  • Manu Tamminen,
  • Mirkka Lahdenperä,
  • Jussi Vahtera,
  • Samuli Rautava,
  • Carlos Gonzales‑Inca,
  • Marja A. Heiskanen,
  • Hanna Lagström

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 193
p. 109093

Abstract

Read online

Objective: Early life microbial exposure influences the composition of gut microbiota. We investigated how early life factors, and the green living environment around infants’ homes, influence the development of gut microbiota during infancy by utilizing data from the Steps to Healthy Development follow-up study (the STEPS study). Methods: The gut microbiota was analyzed at early (∼3 months, n = 959), and late infancy (∼13 months, n = 984) using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, and combined with residential green environment, measured as (1) Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, (2) Vegetation Cover Diversity, and (3) Naturalness Index within a 750 m radius. We compared gut microbiota diversity and composition between early and late infancy, identified significant individual and family level early life factors influencing gut microbiota, and determined the role of the residential green environment measures on gut microbiota development. Results: Alpha diversity (t-test, p < 0.001) and beta diversity (PERMANOVA, R2 = 0.095, p < 0.001) differed between early and late infancy. Birth mode was the strongest contributor to the gut microbiota community composition in early infancy (PERMANOVA, R2 = 0.005, p < 0.01) and the presence of siblings in late infancy (PERMANOVA, R2 = 0.007, p < 0.01). Residential green environment showed no association with community composition, whereas time spend outdoors did (PERMANOVA, R2 = 0.002, p < 0.05). Measures of greenness displayed a statistically significant association with alpha diversity during early infancy, not during late infancy (glm, p < 0.05). In adjusted analysis, the associations remained only with the Naturalness Index, where higher human impact on living environment was associated with decreased species richness (glm, Observed richness, p < 0.05). Conclusions: The role of the residential green environment to the infant gut microbiota is especially important in early infancy, however, other early life factors, such as birth mode and presence of sibling, had a more significant effect on the overall community composition.

Keywords