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Ethnic and diet-related differences in the healthy infant microbiome
by
Fontes, Michelle
, Gupta, Milan
, Sears, Malcolm R.
, Surette, Michael G.
, de Souza, Russell J.
, Campbell, Natalie C.
, Shaikh, Mateen
, Subbarao, Padmaja
, Anand, Sonia S.
, Mandhane, Piushkumar J.
, Stearns, Jennifer C.
, Becker, Allan B.
, Zulyniak, Michael A.
, Beyene, Joseph
, Turvey, Stuart E.
in
Abundance
/ Asian people
/ Babies
/ Bangladesh - ethnology
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Birth weight
/ Body weight gain
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding
/ Canada
/ Cancer Research
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diet
/ Diet - ethnology
/ Digestive system
/ DNA
/ Ethnicity
/ Europe - ethnology
/ European Continental Ancestry Group
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Female
/ Food
/ Gastrointestinal Microbiome
/ Human Genetics
/ Humans
/ India - ethnology
/ Infant
/ Infant gut microbiome
/ Infants
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Laboratories
/ Lactic acid
/ Lactic acid bacteria
/ Male
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Metabolism
/ Metabolomics
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Milk
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Multiculturalism & pluralism
/ Pakistan - ethnology
/ Sri Lanka - ethnology
/ Systems Biology
/ White people
2017
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Ethnic and diet-related differences in the healthy infant microbiome
by
Fontes, Michelle
, Gupta, Milan
, Sears, Malcolm R.
, Surette, Michael G.
, de Souza, Russell J.
, Campbell, Natalie C.
, Shaikh, Mateen
, Subbarao, Padmaja
, Anand, Sonia S.
, Mandhane, Piushkumar J.
, Stearns, Jennifer C.
, Becker, Allan B.
, Zulyniak, Michael A.
, Beyene, Joseph
, Turvey, Stuart E.
in
Abundance
/ Asian people
/ Babies
/ Bangladesh - ethnology
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Birth weight
/ Body weight gain
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding
/ Canada
/ Cancer Research
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diet
/ Diet - ethnology
/ Digestive system
/ DNA
/ Ethnicity
/ Europe - ethnology
/ European Continental Ancestry Group
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Female
/ Food
/ Gastrointestinal Microbiome
/ Human Genetics
/ Humans
/ India - ethnology
/ Infant
/ Infant gut microbiome
/ Infants
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Laboratories
/ Lactic acid
/ Lactic acid bacteria
/ Male
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Metabolism
/ Metabolomics
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Milk
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Multiculturalism & pluralism
/ Pakistan - ethnology
/ Sri Lanka - ethnology
/ Systems Biology
/ White people
2017
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Ethnic and diet-related differences in the healthy infant microbiome
by
Fontes, Michelle
, Gupta, Milan
, Sears, Malcolm R.
, Surette, Michael G.
, de Souza, Russell J.
, Campbell, Natalie C.
, Shaikh, Mateen
, Subbarao, Padmaja
, Anand, Sonia S.
, Mandhane, Piushkumar J.
, Stearns, Jennifer C.
, Becker, Allan B.
, Zulyniak, Michael A.
, Beyene, Joseph
, Turvey, Stuart E.
in
Abundance
/ Asian people
/ Babies
/ Bangladesh - ethnology
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Birth weight
/ Body weight gain
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding
/ Canada
/ Cancer Research
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Diet
/ Diet - ethnology
/ Digestive system
/ DNA
/ Ethnicity
/ Europe - ethnology
/ European Continental Ancestry Group
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Female
/ Food
/ Gastrointestinal Microbiome
/ Human Genetics
/ Humans
/ India - ethnology
/ Infant
/ Infant gut microbiome
/ Infants
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Laboratories
/ Lactic acid
/ Lactic acid bacteria
/ Male
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Metabolism
/ Metabolomics
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Milk
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Multiculturalism & pluralism
/ Pakistan - ethnology
/ Sri Lanka - ethnology
/ Systems Biology
/ White people
2017
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Ethnic and diet-related differences in the healthy infant microbiome
Journal Article
Ethnic and diet-related differences in the healthy infant microbiome
2017
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Overview
Background
The infant gut is rapidly colonized by microorganisms soon after birth, and the composition of the microbiota is dynamic in the first year of life. Although a stable microbiome may not be established until 1 to 3 years after birth, the infant gut microbiota appears to be an important predictor of health outcomes in later life.
Methods
We obtained stool at one year of age from 173 white Caucasian and 182 South Asian infants from two Canadian birth cohorts to gain insight into how maternal and early infancy exposures influence the development of the gut microbiota. We investigated whether the infant gut microbiota differed by ethnicity (referring to groups of people who have certain racial, cultural, religious, or other traits in common) and by breastfeeding status, while accounting for variations in maternal and infant exposures (such as maternal antibiotic use, gestational diabetes, vegetarianism, infant milk diet, time of introduction of solid food, infant birth weight, and weight gain in the first year).
Results
We demonstrate that ethnicity and infant feeding practices independently influence the infant gut microbiome at 1 year, and that ethnic differences can be mapped to alpha diversity as well as a higher abundance of lactic acid bacteria in South Asians and a higher abundance of genera within the order
Clostridiales
in white Caucasians.
Conclusions
The infant gut microbiome is influenced by ethnicity and breastfeeding in the first year of life. Ethnic differences in the gut microbiome may reflect maternal/infant dietary differences and whether these differences are associated with future cardiometabolic outcomes can only be determined after prospective follow-up.
Publisher
BioMed Central,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Babies
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Canada
/ Diabetes
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ European Continental Ancestry Group
/ Female
/ Food
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infants
/ Male
/ Milk
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