A39 DEVELOPMENTALLY REGULATED CECAL CONTENT MICRO-RNAS CORRELATE WITH MATURING MICROBIOTA GENES AND FUNCTIONS IN JUVENILE MICE
C Cuinat, A Taibi, J Tremblay, G Gargari, S Guglielmetti, T Tompkins, E Comelli

TL;DR
This study explores how microRNAs in the gut of young mice correlate with the development of microbial genes and functions, and how probiotics may influence these processes.
Contribution
The study identifies specific microRNA-bacterial gene correlations and potential binding sites, suggesting a regulatory role of host miRNAs in microbial metabolism.
Findings
miR-433 correlates with genes involved in TCA and glyoxylate cycles.
miR-691 correlates with genes related to pyruvate fermentation and amino acid biosynthesis.
Maternal probiotics may accelerate microbial metabolic pathway development.
Abstract
The gut microbiome establishment in early life is critical to life-long health and influenced by the maternal gut ecosystem. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as a new player in host-microbiota interaction due to their regulatory effect on bacterial genes. We previously found that maternal supplementation with a probiotic mix of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus R0011 and Lactobacillus helveticus R0052 supported the maturation of microbial metabolic activity and altered the cecal content miRNA profile in juvenile mice. To investigate the relationship between cecal content miRNAs and inferred microbiota genes and functions in early life and identify potential miRNA-bacterial gene targets. We generated 16S rRNA gene sequencing and NanoString nCounter® data from the cecal content of 14, 21, and 36-days-old C57BL/6 mice born to dams receiving or not probiotic-supplemented water since…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigestive system and related health
