학술논문

Longitudinal comparison of the developing gut virome in infants and their mothers.
Document Type
article
Source
Cell host & microbe. 31(2)
Subject
Humans
Viruses
Bacteriophages
Mothers
Female
Metagenome
Metagenomics
Virome
SURPI
alpha diversity
bacteriophages
beta diversity
infant gut virome
maternal virome
metagenomic sequencing
microbiome
microviruses
parechovirus
picornaviruses
principal component analysis
Prevention
Pediatric
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Microbiology
Medical Microbiology
Immunology
Language
Abstract
The human gut virome and its early life development are poorly understood. Prior studies have captured single-point assessments with the evolution of the infant virome remaining largely unexplored. We performed viral metagenomic sequencing on stool samples collected longitudinally from a cohort of 53 infants from age 2 weeks to 3 years (80.7 billion reads), and from their mothers (9.8 billion reads) to examine and compare viromes. The asymptomatic infant virome consisted of bacteriophages, nonhuman dietary/environmental viruses, and human-host viruses, predominantly picornaviruses. In contrast, human-host viruses were largely absent from the maternal virome. Previously undescribed, sequence-divergent vertebrate viruses were detected in the maternal but not infant virome. As infants aged, the phage component evolved to resemble the maternal virome, but by age 3, the human-host component remained dissimilar from the maternal virome. Thus, early life virome development is determined predominantly by dietary, infectious, and environmental factors rather than direct maternal acquisition.