A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Early-life immunological and microbial differences between East African and North European children




AuthorsNurminen, Noora; Fan, Yue-Mei; Kortekangas, Emma; Lin, Jake; Hallamaa, Lotta; Maleta, Kenneth; Lehto, Kirsi-Maarit; Laitinen, Olli H.; Sinkkonen, Aki; Lempainen, Johanna; Toppari, Jorma; Veijola, Riitta; Kurppa, Kalle; Knip, Mikael; Ashorn, Ulla; Oikarinen, Sami; Ashorn, Per; Hyöty, Heikki

PublisherSpringer Nature

Publication year2026

Journal: Communications medicine

eISSN2730-664X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-026-01482-0

Publication's open availability at the time of reportingOpen Access

Publication channel's open availability Open Access publication channel

Web address https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-026-01482-0


Abstract
Background

The urbanization of African populations adopting Westernized lifestyles might be connected to changes in microbial exposure and immune system activity that are harmful to health and increase the risk of non-communicable diseases, such as immune-mediated diseases. The study aims to compare microbial exposure, immune system markers, and gut microbiota between rural African and Westernized Northern European children to delineate whether there are differences present in these factors in early childhood.

Methods

We compared innate immune cytokines in plasma (IL-10, IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) using Luminex, gut microbiota using 16S rRNA sequencing, and microbial infections using qPCR in early childhood longitudinal sample series of children from rural Africa (participants from the iLINS-DYAD-M study conducted in Malawi) and from Northern Europe (participants from the DIPP study conducted in Finland) to identify differences which could be associated with negative health outcomes in Westernized societies.

Results

Here, we show that the levels of plasma cytokines and frequency of stool pathogen positivity are substantially higher in Malawian than in Finnish children and that some of the cytokines differ in their longitudinal pattern between the two groups. Also, the diversity and composition of gut microbiota differ between the groups at the age of 6 months and diverge more with increasing age.

Conclusions

These results highlight the early emergence of differences in the immune system and gut microbiota between children living in extremities of the microbial exposure gradient. These differences add to the existing knowledge of possible factors contributing to increasing prevalence of chronic inflammatory diseases in African societies shifting towards more Westernized lifestyle.


Funding information in the publication
This work was supported by Business Finland (grant numbers 40333/14 and 6766/31/2017 ADELE project) and Tampere Tuberculosis Foundation. NN has received personal grants from Pirkanmaa Regional fund of Finnish Cultural Foundation, Juho Vainio Foundation, Child and Nature Foundation, and Orion Research Foundation sr. The DIPP study is supported by JDRF (grants 1-SRA-2016-342-M-R, 1-SRA-2019-732-M-B, 3-SRA-2020-955-S-B); Novo Nordisk Foundation; Academy of Finland (Decision No 292538 and Centre of Excellence in Molecular Systems Immunology and Physiology Research 2012-2017, Decision No. 250114); Special Research Funds for University Hospitals in Finland; The Foundation for Pediatric Research, Helsinki, Finland; Sigrid Juselius Foundation, Finland and the Diabetes Research Foundation, Finland.


Last updated on 02/04/2026 08:53:41 AM