Association of Cesarean Delivery and Formula Supplementation with the Stool Metabolome of 6-Week-Old Infants

Author:

Hoen Anne G.,Coker Modupe O.,Madan Juliette C.,Pathmasiri WimalORCID,McRitchie Susan,Dade Erika F.,Doherty Brett T.,Sumner Susan,Karagas Margaret R.

Abstract

Cesarean delivery and formula feeding have both been implicated as important factors associated with perturbations to the infant gut microbiome. To investigate the functional metabolic response of the infant gut microbial milieu to these factors, we profiled the stool metabolomes of 121 infants from a US pregnancy cohort study at approximately 6 weeks of life and evaluated associations with delivery mode and feeding method. Multivariate analysis of six-week stool metabolomic profiles indicated discrimination by both delivery mode and diet. For diet, exclusively breast-fed infants exhibited metabolomic profiles that were distinct from both exclusively formula-fed and combination-fed infants, which were relatively more similar to each other in metabolomic profile. We also identified individual metabolites that were important for differentiating delivery mode groups and feeding groups and metabolic pathways related to delivery mode and feeding type. We conclude based on previous work and this current study that the microbial communities colonizing the gastrointestinal tracts of infants are not only taxonomically, but also functionally distinct when compared according to delivery mode and feeding groups. Further, different sets of metabolites and metabolic pathways define delivery mode and diet metabotypes.

Funder

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

U.S. National Library of Medicine

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Office of the Director

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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