Effect of salmon consumption during pregnancy on maternal and infant faecal microbiota, secretory IgA and calprotectin
Effect of salmon consumption during pregnancy on maternal and infant faecal microbiota, secretory IgA and calprotectin
The gut microbiota plays an important role in the development of the immune and gastrointestinal systems of infants. In the present study, we investigated whether increased salmon consumption during pregnancy, maternal weight gain during pregnancy or mode of infant feeding alter the markers of gut immune defence and inflammation. Women (n 123) who rarely ate oily fish were randomly assigned to continue consuming their habitual diet or to consume two 150 g portions of farmed salmon per week from 20 weeks of pregnancy to delivery. Faecal samples were collected from the mothers (n 75) at 38 weeks of gestation and from their infants (n 38) on days 7, 14, 28 and 84 post-partum. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation was used to determine faecal microbiota composition and ELISA to measure faecal secretory IgA (sIgA) and calprotectin concentrations. There was no effect of salmon consumption on maternal faecal microbiota or on maternal or infant faecal sIgA and calprotectin concentrations. The degree of weight gain influenced maternal faecal microbiota, and the mode of infant feeding influenced infant faecal microbiota. Faecal samples collected from infants in the salmon group tended to have lower bacterial counts of the Atopobium cluster compared with those collected from infants in the control group (P= 0·097). This difference was significant in the formula-fed infants (P< 0·05), but not in the exclusively breast-fed infants. In conclusion, the impact of oily fish consumption during pregnancy on maternal and infant gut microbiota composition is limited, but significant differences are associated with maternal weight gain during pregnancy and mode of infant feeding.
773-784
Urwin, H.J.
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Miles, E.A.
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Noakes, P.S.
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Kremmyda, L.S.
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Vlachava, M.
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Diaper, N.D.
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Godfrey, K.M.
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Calder, P.C.
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Vulevic, J.
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Yaqoob, P.
eb74426f-4486-41ca-bb29-2e3ce3e65b68
March 2014
Urwin, H.J.
574ad2c5-8e12-4b0c-9588-4263491089a5
Miles, E.A.
20332899-ecdb-4214-95bc-922dde36d416
Noakes, P.S.
0ed50cd9-de73-4851-8039-ee72860d8ae5
Kremmyda, L.S.
19781569-bda8-478a-842e-d0e97cce6298
Vlachava, M.
e24c6fcd-7f45-4059-bd6b-3cb7398eef58
Diaper, N.D.
4fb72117-ec04-48e9-b375-3eb5cb4997f5
Godfrey, K.M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Calder, P.C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Vulevic, J.
78607608-3f2b-4e8a-8a7f-84487a5fd1f0
Yaqoob, P.
eb74426f-4486-41ca-bb29-2e3ce3e65b68
Urwin, H.J., Miles, E.A., Noakes, P.S., Kremmyda, L.S., Vlachava, M., Diaper, N.D., Godfrey, K.M., Calder, P.C., Vulevic, J. and Yaqoob, P.
(2014)
Effect of salmon consumption during pregnancy on maternal and infant faecal microbiota, secretory IgA and calprotectin.
British Journal of Nutrition, 111 (5), .
(doi:10.1017/S0007114513003097).
(PMID:24128654)
Abstract
The gut microbiota plays an important role in the development of the immune and gastrointestinal systems of infants. In the present study, we investigated whether increased salmon consumption during pregnancy, maternal weight gain during pregnancy or mode of infant feeding alter the markers of gut immune defence and inflammation. Women (n 123) who rarely ate oily fish were randomly assigned to continue consuming their habitual diet or to consume two 150 g portions of farmed salmon per week from 20 weeks of pregnancy to delivery. Faecal samples were collected from the mothers (n 75) at 38 weeks of gestation and from their infants (n 38) on days 7, 14, 28 and 84 post-partum. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation was used to determine faecal microbiota composition and ELISA to measure faecal secretory IgA (sIgA) and calprotectin concentrations. There was no effect of salmon consumption on maternal faecal microbiota or on maternal or infant faecal sIgA and calprotectin concentrations. The degree of weight gain influenced maternal faecal microbiota, and the mode of infant feeding influenced infant faecal microbiota. Faecal samples collected from infants in the salmon group tended to have lower bacterial counts of the Atopobium cluster compared with those collected from infants in the control group (P= 0·097). This difference was significant in the formula-fed infants (P< 0·05), but not in the exclusively breast-fed infants. In conclusion, the impact of oily fish consumption during pregnancy on maternal and infant gut microbiota composition is limited, but significant differences are associated with maternal weight gain during pregnancy and mode of infant feeding.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 October 2013
Published date: March 2014
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 363595
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/363595
ISSN: 0007-1145
PURE UUID: 9cf7ec88-a8e3-4811-b8da-2811310db9c6
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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2014 15:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:27
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Author:
H.J. Urwin
Author:
P.S. Noakes
Author:
L.S. Kremmyda
Author:
M. Vlachava
Author:
N.D. Diaper
Author:
J. Vulevic
Author:
P. Yaqoob
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