Maternal pre- and postnatal stress and maternal and infant gut microbiota features.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Psychoneuroendocrinology Pub Date : 2025-01-02 DOI:10.1016/j.psyneuen.2024.107273
Henrik Eckermann, Hellen Lustermans, Katariina Parnanen, Leo Lahti, Carolina de Weerth
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Abstract

Background: Maternal stress can have short and long term adverse (mental) health effects for the mother and her child. Previous evidence suggests that the gut microbiota may be a potential mediator and moderator for the effects of stress via various pathways. This study explored the maternal microbiota trajectory during pregnancy as well as the association between pre- and postnatal maternal stress and features of the maternal and infant gut microbiota during and after pregnancy. In line with previous research, we hypothesized that maternal stress would be positively related to maternal and infant microbiota volatility and that infants of highly stressed mothers would show a relative increase in Proteobacteria and a relative decrease in Bifidobacterium.

Methods: We collected maternal stool samples at 18 and 32 weeks of pregnancy and 8 months postpartum. Infant stools samples were obtained at 2, 6 and 12 weeks and 8 months postpartum. All samples were analyzed using shotgun metagenome sequencing. We also collected several measures of maternal stress (self-reported depression, anxiety, and stress, and hair cortisol and cortisone), most at the same time points as the microbiota samples.

Results: Our data indicated that the maternal microbiota does not undergo drastic changes from the second to the third trimester of pregnancy but that the postpartum microbiota differs significantly from the prenatal microbiota. Furthermore, we identified associations between several stress measures and maternal and infant gut microbiota features at different time points including positive and negative associations with alpha diversity, beta diversity and individual microbial phyla and species relative abundances. Also, the maternal stress composite score, the perceived stress score and the log-ratio of hair cortisol and cortisone were all positively associated with infant microbiota volatility.

Conclusion: Our study provides evidence that maternal prenatal and postnatal stress is related to both the maternal and the infant microbiota. Collectively, this and previous studies indicate that maternal stress does not uniformly associate with most gut microbial features. Instead, the associations are highly time point specific. Regarding infant microbiota volatility, we have consistently found a positive association between stress and infant microbiota volatility. This warrants future research investigating this link in more depth.

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产妇产前和产后应激与母婴肠道菌群特征。
背景:母性压力会对母婴产生短期和长期的不良(心理)健康影响。以往的证据表明,肠道微生物群可能是通过各种途径产生压力效应的潜在媒介和调节因子。本研究探讨了孕期母体微生物群的变化轨迹,以及产前和产后母体压力与孕期和产后母婴肠道微生物群特征之间的关联。与之前的研究一致,我们假设母体压力与母婴微生物群的波动呈正相关,高度压力母亲的婴儿会表现出蛋白菌的相对增加和双歧杆菌的相对减少:我们收集了母亲在怀孕 18 周和 32 周以及产后 8 个月的粪便样本。在怀孕 2、6 和 12 周以及产后 8 个月时采集了婴儿粪便样本。所有样本均采用枪式元基因组测序法进行分析。我们还收集了几种衡量产妇压力的指标(自我报告的抑郁、焦虑和压力,以及毛发皮质醇和可的松),大部分与微生物群样本在同一时间点采集:结果:我们的数据表明,从怀孕的第二个三个月到第三个三个月,母体微生物群不会发生剧烈变化,但产后微生物群与产前微生物群有很大不同。此外,我们还发现了几种压力测量指标与不同时间点母婴肠道微生物群特征之间的关联,包括与α多样性、β多样性和单个微生物门类及物种相对丰度之间的正负关联。此外,母体压力综合得分、感知压力得分以及毛发皮质醇和可的松的对数比值都与婴儿微生物群的波动性呈正相关:我们的研究提供的证据表明,母体产前和产后压力与母体和婴儿微生物群有关。总之,本研究和以往的研究表明,母体压力与大多数肠道微生物特征的关系并不一致。相反,这种关联具有高度的时间点特异性。关于婴儿微生物群的波动性,我们一直发现压力与婴儿微生物群的波动性呈正相关。这就需要未来的研究更深入地调查这种联系。
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来源期刊
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Psychoneuroendocrinology 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
8.10%
发文量
268
审稿时长
66 days
期刊介绍: Psychoneuroendocrinology publishes papers dealing with the interrelated disciplines of psychology, neurobiology, endocrinology, immunology, neurology, and psychiatry, with an emphasis on multidisciplinary studies aiming at integrating these disciplines in terms of either basic research or clinical implications. One of the main goals is to understand how a variety of psychobiological factors interact in the expression of the stress response as it relates to the development and/or maintenance of neuropsychiatric illnesses.
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