The Gut Microbiome in Early Life Stress: A Systematic Review

Author:

Agusti Ana1,Lamers Femke2ORCID,Tamayo Maria13,Benito-Amat Carlos4,Molina-Mendoza Gara V.1,Penninx Brenda W. J. H.2ORCID,Sanz Yolanda1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Microbiome, Nutrition & Health Research Unit, Institute of Agrochemistry and Food Technology, Excellence Center Severo Ochoa-Spanish National Research Council (IATA-CSIC), 46980 Valencia, Spain

2. Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam Public Health, Mental Health Program, Department of Psychiatry, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Boelelaan 1117, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Department of Medicine, Autonomous University of Madrid, 28029 Madrid, Spain

4. Institute for the Management and Innovation of Knowledge (INGENIO-CSIC-UPV), Polytechnic University of Valencia, 46022 Valencia, Spain

Abstract

Exposure to early life stress (ELS), prenatal or postnatal during childhood and adolescence, can significantly impact mental and physical health. The role of the intestinal microbiome in human health, and particularly mental health, is becoming increasingly evident. This systematic review aims to summarize the clinical data evaluating the effect of ELS on the human intestinal microbiome. The systematic review (CRD42022351092) was performed following PRISMA guidelines, with ELS considered as exposure to psychological stressors prenatally and during early life (childhood and adolescence). Thirteen articles met all inclusion criteria, and all studies reviewed found a link between ELS and the gut microbiome in both prenatal and postnatal periods. However, we failed to find consensus microbiome signatures associated with pre- or postnatal stress, or both. The inconsistency of results is likely attributed to various factors such as different experimental designs, ages examined, questionnaires, timing of sample collection and analysis methods, small population sizes, and the type of stressors. Additional studies using similar stressors and validated stress measures, as well as higher-resolution microbiome analytical approaches, are needed to draw definitive conclusions about the links between stress and the human gut microbiome.

Funder

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme

European Commission—NextGeneration EU funds

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Margarita Salas contract

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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