Maternal weight, gut microbiota, and the association with early childhood behavior: the PREOBE follow-up study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Nieto Ruiz, Ana María; Jordano, Belen; Escudero Marín, Mireia; García Ricobaraza, María; García Bermúdez, María Mercedes; García Santos, José Antonio; Suárez García, Antonio Francisco; Campoy Folgoso, CristinaEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2023-03-21Referencia bibliográfica
Nieto-Ruiz, A., Cerdó, T., Jordano, B. et al. Maternal weight, gut microbiota, and the association with early childhood behavior: the PREOBE follow-up study. Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health 17, 41 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s13034-023-00589-9]
Patrocinador
Andalusian Government, Economy, Science and Innovation Ministry P06-CTS-02341; Spanish Government SB2010-0025; EU Project FP7 MyNewGut KBBE-2013-7 613979; Ministry of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge, and University of the Junta de Andalucia (Andalusian Plan for Research, Development and Innovation, PAIDI 2020); Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII) CD21/00187Resumen
Background and aim Maternal overweight and breastfeeding seem to have a significant impact on the gut microbiota
colonization process, which co-occurs simultaneously with brain development and the establishment of the
“microbiota-gut-brain axis”, which potentially may affect behavior later in life. This study aimed to examine the influence
of maternal overweight, obesity and/or gestational diabetes on the offspring behavior at 3.5 years of age and its
association with the gut microbiota already established at 18 months of life.
Methods 156 children born to overweight (OV, n = 45), obese (OB, n = 40) and normoweight (NW, n = 71) pregnant
women participating in the PREOBE study were included in the current analysis. Stool samples were collected at
18 months of life and gut microbiome was obtained by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Behavioral problems were evaluated
at 3.5 years by using the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). ANOVA, Chi-Square Test, ANCOVA, Spearman’s correlation,
logistic regression model and generalized linear model (GLM) were performed.
Results At 3.5 years of age, Children born to OV/OB mothers showed higher scores in behavioral problems than
those born to NW mothers. Additionally, offspring born to OB mothers who developed gestational diabetes mellitus
(GDM) presented higher scores in attention/deficit hyperactivity and externalizing problems than those born to GDM
OV/NW mothers. Fusicatenibacter abundance found at 18 months of age was associated to lower scores in total,
internalizing and pervasive developmental problems, while an unidentified genus within Clostridiales and Flavonifractor
families abundance showed a positive correlation with anxiety/depression and somatic complaints, respectively. On the
other hand, children born to mothers with higher BMI who were breastfed presented elevated anxiety, internalizing
problems, externalizing problems and total problems scores; likewise, their gut microbiota composition at 18 months of
age showed positive correlation with behavioral problems at 3.5 years: Actinobacteria abundance and somatic complaints
and between Fusobacteria abundance and withdrawn behavior and pervasive developmental problems.
Conclusions Our findings suggests that OV/OB and/or GDM during pregnancy is associated with higher behavioral
problems scores in children at 3.5 years old. Additionally, associations between early life gut microbiota composition
and later mental health in children was also found.





