4.7 Article

Associations of Childhood and Perinatal Blood Metals with Children's Gut Microbiomes in a Canadian Gestation Cohort

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ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
卷 130, 期 1, 页码 -

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US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/EHP9674

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资金

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R21ES024841, R01ES027845, P30ES009089]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP-84 551]
  3. Canadian Research Chair grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [CRC-950-23 0570]

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This study assessed the associations between childhood and perinatal blood metal levels and childhood gut microbiome diversity, structure, species, gene family-inferred species, and potential pathway alterations. The results showed significant associations between blood metal levels and the gut microbiome, with stronger associations observed with more recent exposure. These findings may have important implications for further understanding the mechanisms underlying the impact of metal exposure on children's health.
BACKGROUND: The gut microbiome is important in modulating health in childhood. Metal exposures affect multiple health outcomes, but their ability to modify bacterial communities in children is poorly understood. OBJECTIVES: We assessed the associations of childhood and perinatal blood metal levels with childhood gut microbiome diversity, structure, species, gene family-inferred species, and potential pathway alterations. METHODS: We assessed the gut microbiome using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and shotgun metagenomic sequencing in stools collected from 6-to 7-year-old children participating in the GESTation and Environment (GESTE) cohort study. We assessed blood metal concentrations [cadmium (Cd), manganese (Mn), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), selenium (Se)] at two time points, namely, perinatal exposures at delivery (N = 70) and childhood exposures at the 6-to 7-y follow-up (N = 68). We used multiple covariate-adjusted statistical models to determine microbiome associations with continuous blood metal levels, including linear regression (Shannon and Pielou alpha diversity indexes), permutational multivariate analysis of variance (adonis; beta diversity distance matrices), and multivariable association model (MaAsLin2; phylum, family, species, gene family-inferred species, and pathways). RESULTS: Children's blood Mn and Se significantly associated with microbiome phylum [e.g., Verrucomicrobiota (coef = - 0.305, q = 0.031; coef = 0.262, q = 0.084, respectively)] and children's blood Mn significantly associated with family [e.g., Eggerthellaceae (coef = - 0.228, q = 0.052)]-level differences. Higher relative abundance of potential pathogens (e.g., Flavonifractor plautii), beneficial species (e.g., Bifidobacterium longum, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii), and both potentially pathogenic and beneficial species (e.g., Bacteriodes vulgatus, Eubacterium rectale) inferred from gene families were associated with higher childhood or perinatal blood Cd, Hg, and Pb (q < 0.1). We found significant negative associations between childhood blood Pb and acetylene degradation pathway abundance (q < 0.1). Finally, neither perinatal nor childhood metal concentrations were associated with children's gut microbial inter-and intrasubject diversity. DISCUSSION: Our findings suggest both long-and short-term associations between metal exposure and the childhood gut microbiome, with stronger associations observed with more recent exposure. Future epidemiologic analyses may elucidate whether the observed changes in the microbiome relate to children's health.

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