粪便
生物
母乳喂养
代谢物
发酵
食品科学
婴儿配方奶粉
微生物学
生物化学
儿科
医学
作者
Lucía Huertas‐Díaz,Rikke Kyhnau,Eugenio Ingribelli,Věra Bunešová,Qing Li,Mari Sasaki,Roger Lauener,Caroline Roduit,Remo Frei,CK-CARE Study Group,Ulrik Kræmer Sundekilde,Clarissa Schwab
出处
期刊:Gut microbes
[Landes Bioscience]
日期:2023-08-18
卷期号:15 (1)
被引量:10
标识
DOI:10.1080/19490976.2023.2241209
摘要
Previous studies indicated an intrinsic relationship between infant diet, intestinal microbiota composition and fermentation activity with a strong focus on the role of breastfeeding on microbiota composition. Yet, microbially formed short-chain fatty acids acetate, propionate and butyrate and other fermentation metabolites such as lactate not only act as substrate for bacterial cross-feeding and as mediators in microbe-host interactions but also confer antimicrobial activity, which has received considerably less attention in the past research. It was the aim of this study to investigate the nutritional-microbial interactions that contribute to the development of infant gut microbiota with a focus on human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) fermentation. Infant fecal microbiota composition, fermentation metabolites and milk composition were analyzed from 69 mother-infant pairs of the Swiss birth cohort Childhood AlleRgy nutrition and Environment (CARE) at three time points depending on breastfeeding status defined at the age of 4 months, using quantitative microbiota profiling, HPLC-RI and
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