4.8 Article

Increasing breast milk betaine modulates Akkermansia abundance in mammalian neonates and improves long-term metabolic health

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 587, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abb0322

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ajinomoto Innovation Alliance Program (Ajinomoto 2015-2017)
  2. EFSD/Lilly programme
  3. Spanish Government [SAF-2017-88005-R, BFU2017-89336-R]
  4. NIH [R01-HD080444]
  5. Mead Johnson Nutrition
  6. European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (ERC Starting Grant) [639226]

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The study found an inverse association between milk betaine content and infant growth, which was replicated in both humans and mice. Higher betaine intake during lactation led to lower adiposity and improved glucose homeostasis in mouse offspring. This effect was linked to increased Akkermansia abundance in the gut and higher intestinal goblet cell number.
Accelerated postnatal growth is a potentially modifiable risk factor for future obesity. To study how specific breast milk components contribute to early growth and obesity risk, we quantified one-carbon metabolism-related metabolites in human breast milk and found an inverse association between milk betaine content and infant growth. This association was replicated in an independent and geographically distinct cohort. To determine the potential role of milk betaine in modulating offspring obesity risk, we performed maternal betaine supplementation experiments in mice. Higher betaine intake during lactation increased milk betaine content in dams and led to lower adiposity and improved glucose homeostasis throughout adulthood in mouse offspring. These effects were accompanied by a transient increase in Akkermansia spp. abundance in the gut during early life and a long-lasting increase in intestinal goblet cell number. The link between breast milk betaine and Akkermansia abundance in the gut was also observed in humans, as infants exposed to higher milk betaine content during breastfeeding showed higher fecal Akkermansia muciniphila abundance. Furthermore, administration of A. muciniphila to mouse pups during the lactation period partially replicated the effects of maternal breast milk betaine, including increased intestinal goblet cell number, lower adiposity, and improved glucose homeostasis during adulthood. These data demonstrate a link between breast milk betaine content and long-term metabolic health of offspring.

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