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Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India

In this cross-sectional study, we describe the composition and diversity of the gut microbiota among undernourished children living in urban slums of Mumbai, India, and determine how nutritional status, including anthropometric measurements, dietary intakes from complementary foods, feeding practice...

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Autores principales: Huey, Samantha L., Jiang, Lingjing, Fedarko, Marcus W., McDonald, Daniel, Martino, Cameron, Ali, Farhana, Russell, David G., Udipi, Shobha A., Thorat, Aparna, Thakker, Varsha, Ghugre, Padmini, Potdar, R. D., Chopra, Harsha, Rajagopalan, Kripa, Haas, Jere D., Finkelstein, Julia L., Knight, Rob, Mehta, Saurabh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7568645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32968008
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00731-20
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author Huey, Samantha L.
Jiang, Lingjing
Fedarko, Marcus W.
McDonald, Daniel
Martino, Cameron
Ali, Farhana
Russell, David G.
Udipi, Shobha A.
Thorat, Aparna
Thakker, Varsha
Ghugre, Padmini
Potdar, R. D.
Chopra, Harsha
Rajagopalan, Kripa
Haas, Jere D.
Finkelstein, Julia L.
Knight, Rob
Mehta, Saurabh
author_facet Huey, Samantha L.
Jiang, Lingjing
Fedarko, Marcus W.
McDonald, Daniel
Martino, Cameron
Ali, Farhana
Russell, David G.
Udipi, Shobha A.
Thorat, Aparna
Thakker, Varsha
Ghugre, Padmini
Potdar, R. D.
Chopra, Harsha
Rajagopalan, Kripa
Haas, Jere D.
Finkelstein, Julia L.
Knight, Rob
Mehta, Saurabh
author_sort Huey, Samantha L.
collection PubMed
description In this cross-sectional study, we describe the composition and diversity of the gut microbiota among undernourished children living in urban slums of Mumbai, India, and determine how nutritional status, including anthropometric measurements, dietary intakes from complementary foods, feeding practices, and micronutrient concentrations, is associated with their gut microbiota. We collected rectal swabs from children aged 10 to 18 months living in urban slums of Mumbai participating in a randomized controlled feeding trial and conducted 16S rRNA sequencing to determine the composition of the gut microbiota. Across the study cohort, Proteobacteria dominated the gut microbiota at over 80% relative abundance, with Actinobacteria representation at <4%, suggesting immaturity of the gut. Increased microbial α-diversity was associated with current breastfeeding, greater head circumference, higher fat intake, and lower hemoglobin concentration and weight-for-length Z-score. In redundancy analyses, 47% of the variation in Faith’s phylogenetic diversity (Faith’s PD) could be accounted for by age and by iron and polyunsaturated fatty acid intakes. Differences in community structure (β-diversity) of the microbiota were observed among those consuming fats and oils the previous day compared to those not consuming fats and oils the previous day. Our findings suggest that growth, diet, and feeding practices are associated with gut microbiota metrics in undernourished children, whose gut microbiota were comprised mainly of Proteobacteria, a phylum containing many potentially pathogenic taxa. IMPORTANCE The impact of comprehensive nutritional status, defined as growth, nutritional blood biomarkers, dietary intakes, and feeding practices, on the gut microbiome in children living in low-resource settings has remained underreported in microbiome research. Among undernourished children living in urban slums of Mumbai, India, we observed a high relative abundance of Proteobacteria, a phylum including many potentially pathogenic species similar to the composition in preterm infants, suggesting immaturity of the gut, or potentially a high inflammatory burden. We found head circumference, fat and iron intake, and current breastfeeding were positively associated with microbial diversity, while hemoglobin and weight for length were associated with lower diversity. Findings suggest that examining comprehensive nutrition is critical to gain more understanding of how nutrition and the gut microbiota are linked, particularly in vulnerable populations such as children in urban slum settings.
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spelling pubmed-75686452020-10-27 Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India Huey, Samantha L. Jiang, Lingjing Fedarko, Marcus W. McDonald, Daniel Martino, Cameron Ali, Farhana Russell, David G. Udipi, Shobha A. Thorat, Aparna Thakker, Varsha Ghugre, Padmini Potdar, R. D. Chopra, Harsha Rajagopalan, Kripa Haas, Jere D. Finkelstein, Julia L. Knight, Rob Mehta, Saurabh mSphere Research Article In this cross-sectional study, we describe the composition and diversity of the gut microbiota among undernourished children living in urban slums of Mumbai, India, and determine how nutritional status, including anthropometric measurements, dietary intakes from complementary foods, feeding practices, and micronutrient concentrations, is associated with their gut microbiota. We collected rectal swabs from children aged 10 to 18 months living in urban slums of Mumbai participating in a randomized controlled feeding trial and conducted 16S rRNA sequencing to determine the composition of the gut microbiota. Across the study cohort, Proteobacteria dominated the gut microbiota at over 80% relative abundance, with Actinobacteria representation at <4%, suggesting immaturity of the gut. Increased microbial α-diversity was associated with current breastfeeding, greater head circumference, higher fat intake, and lower hemoglobin concentration and weight-for-length Z-score. In redundancy analyses, 47% of the variation in Faith’s phylogenetic diversity (Faith’s PD) could be accounted for by age and by iron and polyunsaturated fatty acid intakes. Differences in community structure (β-diversity) of the microbiota were observed among those consuming fats and oils the previous day compared to those not consuming fats and oils the previous day. Our findings suggest that growth, diet, and feeding practices are associated with gut microbiota metrics in undernourished children, whose gut microbiota were comprised mainly of Proteobacteria, a phylum containing many potentially pathogenic taxa. IMPORTANCE The impact of comprehensive nutritional status, defined as growth, nutritional blood biomarkers, dietary intakes, and feeding practices, on the gut microbiome in children living in low-resource settings has remained underreported in microbiome research. Among undernourished children living in urban slums of Mumbai, India, we observed a high relative abundance of Proteobacteria, a phylum including many potentially pathogenic species similar to the composition in preterm infants, suggesting immaturity of the gut, or potentially a high inflammatory burden. We found head circumference, fat and iron intake, and current breastfeeding were positively associated with microbial diversity, while hemoglobin and weight for length were associated with lower diversity. Findings suggest that examining comprehensive nutrition is critical to gain more understanding of how nutrition and the gut microbiota are linked, particularly in vulnerable populations such as children in urban slum settings. American Society for Microbiology 2020-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7568645/ /pubmed/32968008 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00731-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Huey et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Huey, Samantha L.
Jiang, Lingjing
Fedarko, Marcus W.
McDonald, Daniel
Martino, Cameron
Ali, Farhana
Russell, David G.
Udipi, Shobha A.
Thorat, Aparna
Thakker, Varsha
Ghugre, Padmini
Potdar, R. D.
Chopra, Harsha
Rajagopalan, Kripa
Haas, Jere D.
Finkelstein, Julia L.
Knight, Rob
Mehta, Saurabh
Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title_full Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title_fullStr Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title_full_unstemmed Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title_short Nutrition and the Gut Microbiota in 10- to 18-Month-Old Children Living in Urban Slums of Mumbai, India
title_sort nutrition and the gut microbiota in 10- to 18-month-old children living in urban slums of mumbai, india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7568645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32968008
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00731-20
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