Maternal diet and gut microbiome composition modulate early‐life immune development

Author:

Grant Erica T12ORCID,Boudaud Marie1ORCID,Muller Arnaud34ORCID,Macpherson Andrew J5ORCID,Desai Mahesh S1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infection and Immunity Luxembourg Institute of Health Esch‐sur‐Alzette Luxembourg

2. Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine University of Luxembourg Esch‐sur‐Alzette Luxembourg

3. Bioinformatics Platform, Data Integration and Analysis Luxembourg Institute of Health Strassen Luxembourg

4. LuxGen, Translational Medicine Operation Hub Luxembourg Institute of Health Dudelange Luxembourg

5. Department of Visceral Surgery and Medicine Bern University Hospital, University of Bern Bern Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractIn early life, the intestinal mucosa and immune system undergo a critical developmental process to contain the expanding gut microbiome while promoting tolerance toward commensals, yet the influence of maternal diet and microbial composition on offspring immune maturation remains poorly understood. We colonized germ‐free mice with a consortium of 14 strains, fed them a standard fiber‐rich chow or a fiber‐free diet, and then longitudinally assessed offspring development during the weaning period. Unlike pups born to dams fed the fiber‐rich diet, pups of fiber‐deprived dams demonstrated delayed colonization with Akkermansia muciniphila, a mucin‐foraging bacterium that can also use milk oligosaccharides. The pups of fiber‐deprived dams exhibited an enrichment of colonic transcripts corresponding to defense response pathways and a peak in Il22 expression at weaning. Removal of A. muciniphila from the community, but maintenance on the fiber‐rich diet, was associated with reduced proportions of RORγt‐positive innate and adaptive immune cell subsets. Our results highlight the potent influence of maternal dietary fiber intake and discrete changes in microbial composition on the postnatal microbiome assemblage and early immune development.

Funder

European Commission

Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Molecular Medicine

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