A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The Dynamics of the Human Infant Gut Microbiome in Development and in Progression toward Type 1 Diabetes




AuthorsKostic AD, Gevers D, Siljander H, Vatanen T, Hyotylainen T, Hamalainen AM, Peet A, Tillmann V, Poho P, Mattila I, Lahdesmaki H, Franzosa EA, Vaarala O, de Goffau M, Harmsen H, Ilonen J, Virtanen SM, Clish CB, Oresic M, Huttenhower C, Knip M, Xavier RJ

PublisherCell Press

Publication year2015

JournalCell Host and Microbe

Journal name in sourceCELL HOST & MICROBE

Journal acronymCELL HOST MICROBE

Volume17

Issue2

First page 260

Last page273

Number of pages14

ISSN1931-3128

eISSN1934-6069

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2015.01.001


Abstract

Colonization of the fetal and infant gut microbiome results in dynamic changes in diversity, which can impact disease susceptibility. To examine the relationship between human gut microbiome dynamics throughout infancy and type 1 diabetes (T1D), we examined a cohort of 33 infants genetically predisposed to T1D. Modeling trajectories of microbial abundances through infancy revealed a subset of microbial relationships shared across most subjects. Although strain composition of a given species was highly variable between individuals, it was stable within individuals throughout infancy. Metabolic composition and metabolic pathway abundance remained constant across time. A marked drop in alpha-diversity was observed in T1D progressors in the time window between seroconversion and T1D diagnosis, accompanied by spikes in inflammation-favoring organisms, gene functions, and serum and stool metabolites. This work identifies trends in the development of the human infant gut microbiome along with specific alterations that precede T1D onset and distinguish T1D progressors from non-progressors.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:22