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Social and psychological adversity are associated with distinct mother and infant gut microbiome variations

Author

Listed:
  • Barbara B. Warner

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Bruce A. Rosa

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • I. Malick Ndao

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Phillip I. Tarr

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
    Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • J. Philip Miller

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Sarah K. England

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Joan L. Luby

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Cynthia E. Rogers

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Carla Hall-Moore

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Renay E. Bryant

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Jacqueline D. Wang

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Laura A. Linneman

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Tara A. Smyser

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Christopher D. Smyser

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Deanna M. Barch

    (Washington University in St. Louis)

  • Gregory E. Miller

    (Northwestern University)

  • Edith Chen

    (Northwestern University)

  • John Martin

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

  • Makedonka Mitreva

    (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

Abstract

Health disparities are driven by underlying social disadvantage and psychosocial stressors. However, how social disadvantage and psychosocial stressors lead to adverse health outcomes is unclear, particularly when exposure begins prenatally. Variations in the gut microbiome and circulating proinflammatory cytokines offer potential mechanistic pathways. Here, we interrogate the gut microbiome of mother-child dyads to compare high-versus-low prenatal social disadvantage, psychosocial stressors and maternal circulating cytokine cohorts (prospective case-control study design using gut microbiomes from 121 dyads profiled with 16 S rRNA sequencing and 89 dyads with shotgun metagenomic sequencing). Gut microbiome characteristics significantly predictive of social disadvantage and psychosocial stressors in the mothers and children indicate that different discriminatory taxa and related pathways are involved, including many species of Bifidobacterium and related pathways across several comparisons. The lowest inter-individual gut microbiome similarity was observed among high-social disadvantage/high-psychosocial stressors mothers, suggesting distinct environmental exposures driving a diverging gut microbiome assembly compared to low-social disadvantage/low-psychosocial stressors controls (P = 3.5 × 10−5 for social disadvantage, P = 2.7 × 10−15 for psychosocial stressors). Children’s gut metagenome profiles at 4 months also significantly predicted high/low maternal prenatal IL-6 (P = 0.029), with many bacterial species overlapping those identified by social disadvantage and psychosocial stressors. These differences, based on maternal social and psychological status during a critical developmental window early in life, offer potentially modifiable targets to mitigate health inequities.

Suggested Citation

  • Barbara B. Warner & Bruce A. Rosa & I. Malick Ndao & Phillip I. Tarr & J. Philip Miller & Sarah K. England & Joan L. Luby & Cynthia E. Rogers & Carla Hall-Moore & Renay E. Bryant & Jacqueline D. Wang , 2023. "Social and psychological adversity are associated with distinct mother and infant gut microbiome variations," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-19, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:14:y:2023:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-023-41421-4
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-41421-4
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
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