4.6 Article

Maternal Gut Dysbiosis Alters Offspring Microbiota and Social Interactions

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9081742

Keywords

maternal gut dysbiosis; antibiotics; offspring; gut microbiota; metabolome; social behavior

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32070447, 31760156]
  2. Youth Talent Introduction and Education Program of Shandong Province [20190601]

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The study suggests that maternal gut dysbiosis may contribute to neurodevelopmental disorders and behavioral defects in offspring, with maternal antibiotic treatment leading to significant changes in offspring gut microbiota and social interactions. This highlights the potential role of maternal gut microbiota as a mediator between offspring microbiota and behaviors in animal models.
Increasing application of antibiotics changes the gut microbiota composition, leading to dysbiosis of the gut microbiota. Although growing evidence suggests the potential role of gut dysbiosis as the cause of neurodevelopmental disorders and behavioral defects, a broad gap of knowledge remains to be narrowed to better understand the exact mechanisms by which maternal gut dysbiosis alters microbiota development and social interactions of offspring. Here, we showed that maternal gut dysbiosis during gestation is a critical determinant of gut microbiota and social interactions off mouse offspring. Gut microbiota of 2-week-old offspring showed significant changes in response to maternal antibiotic treatment. We even detected distinct effects of maternal oral antibiotics on gut microbiota of 14-week-old offspring. Compared to controls, offspring born to antibiotics-treated mothers displayed reduction in sociability and preference for social novelty, suggesting that the altered offspring social behavior was closely linked to dysbiosis of maternal gut microbiota. Our study opens the possibility to better understand the mechanism of how maternal gut microbiota vertically impairs social interactions of offspring in animal models, providing support to the maternal gut microbiota as a potential mediator between offspring microbiota and behaviors.

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