Cargando…

Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life

Few studies have analyzed the gut microbiota of child in unindustrialized countries, but none during the first month of life. Stool samples were collected from healthy newborns in hospitals of Gabon (n = 6) and Republic of the Congo (n = 9) at different time points during the first month of life: me...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Brazier, Lionel, Elguero, Eric, Koumavor, Claudine Kombila, Renaud, Nicolas, Prugnolle, Franck, Thomas, Frédéric, Ategbo, Simon, Engoba, Moyen, Obengui, Leroy, Eric M., Durand, Patrick, Renaud, François, Becquart, Pierre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5624699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28968427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185569
_version_ 1783268284141928448
author Brazier, Lionel
Elguero, Eric
Koumavor, Claudine Kombila
Renaud, Nicolas
Prugnolle, Franck
Thomas, Frédéric
Ategbo, Simon
Engoba, Moyen
Obengui,
Leroy, Eric M.
Durand, Patrick
Renaud, François
Becquart, Pierre
author_facet Brazier, Lionel
Elguero, Eric
Koumavor, Claudine Kombila
Renaud, Nicolas
Prugnolle, Franck
Thomas, Frédéric
Ategbo, Simon
Engoba, Moyen
Obengui,
Leroy, Eric M.
Durand, Patrick
Renaud, François
Becquart, Pierre
author_sort Brazier, Lionel
collection PubMed
description Few studies have analyzed the gut microbiota of child in unindustrialized countries, but none during the first month of life. Stool samples were collected from healthy newborns in hospitals of Gabon (n = 6) and Republic of the Congo (n = 9) at different time points during the first month of life: meconium, day 2 (D02), day 7 (D07) and day 28 (D28). In addition, one fecal sample was collected from each mother after delivery. Metagenomic sequencing was performed to determine the bacterial communities, and multiplex real-time PCR was used to detect the presence of seven enteric viruses (rotavirus a, adenovirus, norovirus I and II, sapovirus, astrovirus, enterovirus) in these samples. Bacterial diversity was high in the first days of life, and was dominated by the genus Prevotella. Then, it rapidly decreased and remained low up to D28 when the gut flora was composed almost exclusively of strictly anaerobic bacteria. Each infant’s fecal bacterial microbiota composition was significantly closer to that of their mother than to that of any other woman in the mothers’ group, suggesting an intrauterine, placental or amniotic fluid origin of such bacteria. Moreover, bacterial communities differed according to the delivery mode. Overall, the bacterial microbiota communities displayed a similar diversification and expansion in newborns within and between countries during the first four weeks of life. Moreover, six of the fifteen infants of this study harbored enteric viruses (rotavirus, enterovirus and adenovirus) in fecal samples, but never in the meconium. A maternal source for the viruses detected at D02 and D07 can be excluded because none of them was found also in the child’s mother. These findings improve our knowledge on the gut bacterial and viral communities of infants from two Sub-Saharan countries during their first month of life.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5624699
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-56246992017-10-17 Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life Brazier, Lionel Elguero, Eric Koumavor, Claudine Kombila Renaud, Nicolas Prugnolle, Franck Thomas, Frédéric Ategbo, Simon Engoba, Moyen Obengui, Leroy, Eric M. Durand, Patrick Renaud, François Becquart, Pierre PLoS One Research Article Few studies have analyzed the gut microbiota of child in unindustrialized countries, but none during the first month of life. Stool samples were collected from healthy newborns in hospitals of Gabon (n = 6) and Republic of the Congo (n = 9) at different time points during the first month of life: meconium, day 2 (D02), day 7 (D07) and day 28 (D28). In addition, one fecal sample was collected from each mother after delivery. Metagenomic sequencing was performed to determine the bacterial communities, and multiplex real-time PCR was used to detect the presence of seven enteric viruses (rotavirus a, adenovirus, norovirus I and II, sapovirus, astrovirus, enterovirus) in these samples. Bacterial diversity was high in the first days of life, and was dominated by the genus Prevotella. Then, it rapidly decreased and remained low up to D28 when the gut flora was composed almost exclusively of strictly anaerobic bacteria. Each infant’s fecal bacterial microbiota composition was significantly closer to that of their mother than to that of any other woman in the mothers’ group, suggesting an intrauterine, placental or amniotic fluid origin of such bacteria. Moreover, bacterial communities differed according to the delivery mode. Overall, the bacterial microbiota communities displayed a similar diversification and expansion in newborns within and between countries during the first four weeks of life. Moreover, six of the fifteen infants of this study harbored enteric viruses (rotavirus, enterovirus and adenovirus) in fecal samples, but never in the meconium. A maternal source for the viruses detected at D02 and D07 can be excluded because none of them was found also in the child’s mother. These findings improve our knowledge on the gut bacterial and viral communities of infants from two Sub-Saharan countries during their first month of life. Public Library of Science 2017-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5624699/ /pubmed/28968427 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185569 Text en © 2017 Brazier et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Brazier, Lionel
Elguero, Eric
Koumavor, Claudine Kombila
Renaud, Nicolas
Prugnolle, Franck
Thomas, Frédéric
Ategbo, Simon
Engoba, Moyen
Obengui,
Leroy, Eric M.
Durand, Patrick
Renaud, François
Becquart, Pierre
Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title_full Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title_fullStr Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title_full_unstemmed Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title_short Evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central African countries (Gabon and Republic of the Congo) during their first month of life
title_sort evolution in fecal bacterial/viral composition in infants of two central african countries (gabon and republic of the congo) during their first month of life
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5624699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28968427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185569
work_keys_str_mv AT brazierlionel evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT elgueroeric evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT koumavorclaudinekombila evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT renaudnicolas evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT prugnollefranck evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT thomasfrederic evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT ategbosimon evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT engobamoyen evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT obengui evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT leroyericm evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT durandpatrick evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT renaudfrancois evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife
AT becquartpierre evolutioninfecalbacterialviralcompositionininfantsoftwocentralafricancountriesgabonandrepublicofthecongoduringtheirfirstmonthoflife