The triad of maternal gut-breast milk-infant gut microbial transmission in early life as a critical pathway for microbial inheritance
Yanli Du, Jing Cheng, Ruixia Xie, Yongke Zhang, Zhili Huang, Gang Jin, Xiulan Dong, Dayong Sun, Bingxiang Yang, Zongli Han, Xiangyu Wang

TL;DR
This study explores how microbes from a mother's gut are passed to her infant through breast milk, shaping the infant's gut microbiota from birth.
Contribution
The study reveals the maternal gut-breast milk-infant gut pathway as a key route for microbial inheritance in early life.
Findings
Exclusively breastfed newborns' gut microbiota on day one primarily comes from breast milk.
Bifidobacteria is a notable example of microbes transferred via the maternal gut-breast milk-infant gut pathway.
Microbial diversity in breastfed infants is remarkably high from the first day of life.
Abstract
Although maternal microbial inheritance is recognized, the temporal dynamics of how the maternal gut microbiota shapes the infant gut microbiota via specific routes remain unexplored. We performed longitudinal, multi-site microbiota sampling in 30 mother-infant pairs (including 14 exclusive breastfeeding and 16 mixed breastfeeding) from birth to one month, stratified by lactation stages. To trace the origin of breast milk microbiota, we also analyzed colostrum and gut samples from 8 postpartum mothers separated from their infants. Using 16S RNA sequencing, we analyzed microbial diversity and correlations across lactation stages. The results demonstrated that the gut microbiota of exclusively breastfed newborns on the first day primarily originated from breast milk and exhibited remarkably high diversity. We identified maternal gut-breast milk-infant gut transfer as a key pathway for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Bacteriophages and microbial interactions
