Press Release: With Respiratory Infections in Infants the Association of Maternal and Infant Early Gut Microbiota

Posted on August 22, 2025 by Admin

Researchers in Finland studied whether gut microbiota composition in mothers and young infants is linked to the risk of developing a respiratory tract infection (RTI) during the first six months of the infant’s life.

They found that infants with RTIs had differences in the relative abundance of specific bacterial taxa compared with those without, while overall alpha and beta diversity remained similar. Microbial communities in mothers also showed differences.

Study

Researchers hypothesized that early infant gut microbiota, along with maternal microbiota, could be associated with the occurrence of RTIs during the first six months of life. They used a nested case-control analysis that included healthy full-term non-twin Finnish infants with birth weights of at least 2.5 kg.

RTI cases were defined as infants who developed upper RTI with fever, otitis media, or lower RTI during the first six months of life. Families recorded infection symptoms and medical visits in an online diary weekly during the first four months and biweekly until seven months, allowing precise tracking of RTIs.

Fecal samples were collected from mothers around their due date and from infants at three and six weeks of age. Samples were frozen immediately at home and later processed for DNA extraction and 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterize microbiota composition.

Of 1052 infants in the Helsinki cohort, 189 developed RTIs within six months. Microbiota data were available for 178 infants and 136 mothers in the RTI group, and for 143 infants and 125 mothers in the control group, totaling 461 infant and 261 maternal samples.

Analyses compared microbial diversity (alpha and beta) and the relative abundance of bacterial taxa between groups. Sensitivity analyses excluded infants with infections prior to stool sampling and matched cases and controls by relevant factors (season of birth, sex, and delivery mode).

Results

Among 178 infants who developed an RTI within the first six months and 143 controls, the median RTI duration was 11 days. Most cases were upper RTIs with fever (49%) or otitis media (47%), while only 4% were lower RTIs.

About 30% of RTI cases occurred within the first three months, most commonly otitis media. Over half of the affected infants visited a doctor, and 14% required emergency care, whereas far fewer controls had medical visits.

In maternal microbiota, overall diversity and richness did not differ between groups, but mothers of infants with RTIs had higher abundances of Citrobacter, Enterobacter, and Enterococcus, while Clostridium was lower. These bacteria were described by the authors as opportunistic pathogens, suggesting that maternal microbial instability could play a role in shaping infant risk.

For infants, overall microbial composition at 3 and 6 weeks was similar between groups. However, at three weeks, those who later developed RTIs showed higher levels of several bacterial families (such as Rikenellaceae, Prevotellaceae, and Verrucomicrobiaceae) and genera, including Alistipes, Akkermansia, Faecalibacterium, Peptoniphilus, and Serratia. The higher abundance of Faecalibacterium was notable because previous studies had often linked lower levels of this genus to respiratory problems, highlighting a potential contradiction with earlier findings.

At six weeks, Prevotellaceae remained elevated in infants who developed RTIs within three months, while reduced Anaerostipes, another butyrate producer, was observed. Anaerostipes depletion may alter lactate and butyrate metabolism, with possible downstream effects on immune function.

Sensitivity analyses confirmed these findings, showing consistent associations with higher abundances of butyrate-producing genera (Pseudobutyrivibrio, Faecalibacterium, and Roseburia), and Proteus, and lower Veillonella and Anaerostipes in infants who developed RTIs.

Conclusion

In conclusion, maternal and early infant gut microbiota composition may influence early susceptibility to RTIs, highlighting potential targets for preventive interventions in future studies. The authors emphasized these are associations, not proof of causation, and that the analysis was exploratory with a false discovery rate (FDR) threshold of 0.1. They further proposed that the early appearance of adult-type butyrate producers, such as Faecalibacterium and Roseburia, could represent a “premature gut microbiota maturation” that predisposes infants to infection.

The strengths of this analysis include the large, longitudinal birth cohort, systematic parental reporting of mild RTIs, and analysis of both infant and maternal samples. However, limitations involve the relatively homogenous, high-income population, universal breastfeeding, and restriction to healthy, full-term infants, limiting generalizability.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20250821/Gut-bacteria-in-mothers-and-newborns-may-shape-infantse28099-risk-of-early-respiratory-infections.aspx