TY - JOUR
T1 - Patterned progression of bacterial populations in the premature infant gut
AU - La Rosa, Patricio S.
AU - Warner, Barbara B.
AU - Zhou, Yanjiao
AU - Weinstock, George M.
AU - Sodergren, Erica
AU - Hall-Moore, Carla M.
AU - Stevens, Harold J.
AU - Bennett, William E.
AU - Shaikh, Nurmohammad
AU - Linneman, Laura A.
AU - Hoffmann, Julie A.
AU - Hamvas, Aaron
AU - Deych, Elena
AU - Shands, Berkley A.
AU - Shannon, William D.
AU - Tarr, Phillip I.
PY - 2014/8/26
Y1 - 2014/8/26
N2 - In the weeks after birth, the gut acquires a nascent microbiome, and starts its transition to bacterial population equilibrium. This early-in-life microbial population quite likely influences later-in-life host biology. However, we know little about the governance of community development: does the gut serve as a passive incubator where the first organisms randomly encountered gain entry and predominate, or is there an orderly progression of members joining the community of bacteria? We used fine interval enumeration of microbes in stools from multiple subjects to answer this question. We demonstrate via 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing of 922 specimens from 58 subjects that the gut microbiota of premature infants residing in a tightly controlled microbial environment progresses through a choreographed succession of bacterial classes from Bacilli to Gammaproteobacteria to Clostridia, interrupted by abrupt population changes. As infants approach 33-36 wk postconceptional age (corresponding to the third to the twelfth weeks of life depending on gestational age at birth), the gut is well colonized by anaerobes. Antibiotics, vaginal vs. Caesarian birth, diet, and age of the infants when sampled influence the pace, but not the sequence, of progression. Our results suggest that in infants in a microbiologically constrained ecosphere of a neonatal intensive care unit, gut bacterial communities have an overall nonrandom assembly that is punctuated by microbial population abruptions. The possibility that the pace of this assembly depends more on host biology (chiefly gestational age at birth) than identifiable exogenous factors warrants further consideration.
AB - In the weeks after birth, the gut acquires a nascent microbiome, and starts its transition to bacterial population equilibrium. This early-in-life microbial population quite likely influences later-in-life host biology. However, we know little about the governance of community development: does the gut serve as a passive incubator where the first organisms randomly encountered gain entry and predominate, or is there an orderly progression of members joining the community of bacteria? We used fine interval enumeration of microbes in stools from multiple subjects to answer this question. We demonstrate via 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing of 922 specimens from 58 subjects that the gut microbiota of premature infants residing in a tightly controlled microbial environment progresses through a choreographed succession of bacterial classes from Bacilli to Gammaproteobacteria to Clostridia, interrupted by abrupt population changes. As infants approach 33-36 wk postconceptional age (corresponding to the third to the twelfth weeks of life depending on gestational age at birth), the gut is well colonized by anaerobes. Antibiotics, vaginal vs. Caesarian birth, diet, and age of the infants when sampled influence the pace, but not the sequence, of progression. Our results suggest that in infants in a microbiologically constrained ecosphere of a neonatal intensive care unit, gut bacterial communities have an overall nonrandom assembly that is punctuated by microbial population abruptions. The possibility that the pace of this assembly depends more on host biology (chiefly gestational age at birth) than identifiable exogenous factors warrants further consideration.
KW - Mixed model regression analysis
KW - Necrotizing enterocolitis
KW - Nonmetric multidimensional scaling
KW - Prematurity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84906679880&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1409497111
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1409497111
M3 - Article
C2 - 25114261
AN - SCOPUS:84906679880
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 111
SP - 12522
EP - 12527
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 34
ER -