# Maternal gut microbiota and placenta-derived tissues microbes are important for initial gut microbial colonization in infants

**Authors:** Ziyi Zhang, Longlong Jia, Bin Liu, Yanpin Liu, Junying Zhao, Yaling Wang, Minghui Zhang, Weicang Qiao, Baoyu Yang, Lingling Luo, Lijun Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2025.1631590 · 2025-10-31

## TL;DR

This study shows that infants' early gut microbes come mainly from their mothers, including the gut and placenta, not the birth canal.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence that placenta-derived tissues contribute to infant gut microbiota, challenging the sterile womb theory.

## Key findings

- Infant gut microbiota mainly originate from maternal gut and placenta-derived tissues.
- Vaginal microbiota does not influence infant gut colonization.
- The placenta contains microbiota, suggesting the uterus is not sterile.

## Abstract

Early infant gut microbiota colonization, influenced by various factors, significantly affects future growth and development. However, results related to how the initial microbial ecology is established in the infant gut remain inconsistent.

In this study, we collected maternal and infant feces, vaginal secretions, placental tissues, breast milk, amniotic membrane tissues, umbilical cord blood, and breast skin for homology comparisons and for exploring the main sources of infant intestinal microbiota. Our results revealed that early infant gut microbiota originated mainly from the vertical transmission of maternal microbiota, and that vaginal microbiota did not affect infant gut microbiota colonization. Microbiota was detected in the placenta, supporting the idea that the uterus is not sterile. Moreover, we verified microbial composition-related similarities in the amniotic tissues and umbilical cord blood, further validating our hypothesis that gut microbiota in the early stages of infancy are mainly vertically transmitted from the mother and placenta-derived tissues also play a significant role in the formation of the infant’s initial gut microbiota. Notably, none of the hereby-mentioned influences (i.e., gender, delivery mode, feeding mode, and Hepatitis B virus) affected significantly infant gut microbiota colonization.

This study demonstrated that infant intestinal microbiota resulted from microbiotic co-provision from multiple maternal sites. In addition to the maternal gut microbiota, the placenta-derived tissues is the relevant contributor to initial infant gut microbiota, providing strong evidence for the source colonization of the infant gut microbiota.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Hepatitis B virus (no rank) [taxon 10407]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12617009/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12617009