Gut Microbes (Dec 2023)

Maturation of the gut metabolome during the first year of life in humans

  • Runze Ouyang,
  • Juan Ding,
  • Yan Huang,
  • Fujian Zheng,
  • Sijia Zheng,
  • Yaorui Ye,
  • Qi Li,
  • Xiaolin Wang,
  • Xiao Ma,
  • Yuxin Zou,
  • Rong Chen,
  • Zhihong Zhuo,
  • Zhen Li,
  • Qi Xin,
  • Lina Zhou,
  • Xin Lu,
  • Zhigang Ren,
  • Xinyu Liu,
  • Petia Kovatcheva-Datchary,
  • Guowang Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2023.2231596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

ABSTRACTThe gut microbiota is involved in the production of numerous metabolites that maintain host wellbeing. The assembly of the gut microbiome is highly dynamic, and influenced by many postnatal factors, moreover, little is known about the development of the gut metabolome. We showed that geography has an important influence on the microbiome dynamics in the first year of life based on two independent cohorts from China and Sweden. Major compositional differences since birth were the high relative abundance of Bacteroides in the Swedish cohort and Streptococcus in the Chinese cohort. We analyzed the development of the fecal metabolome in the first year of life in the Chinese cohort. Lipid metabolism, especially acylcarnitines and bile acids, was the most abundant metabolic pathway in the newborn gut. Delivery mode and feeding induced particular differences in the gut metabolome since birth. In contrast to C-section newborns, medium- and long-chain acylcarnitines were abundant at newborn age only in vaginally delivered infants, associated by the presence of bacteria such as Bacteroides vulgatus and Parabacteroides merdae. Our data provide a basis for understanding the maturation of the fecal metabolome and the metabolic role of gut microbiota in infancy.

Keywords