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      A Child's urine is not sterile: A pilot study evaluating the Pediatric Urinary Microbiome

      , , , , ,
      Journal of Pediatric Urology
      Elsevier BV

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          Cutadapt removes adapter sequences from high-throughput sequencing reads

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            The maternal microbiota drives early postnatal innate immune development.

            Postnatal colonization of the body with microbes is assumed to be the main stimulus to postnatal immune development. By transiently colonizing pregnant female mice, we show that the maternal microbiota shapes the immune system of the offspring. Gestational colonization increases intestinal group 3 innate lymphoid cells and F4/80(+)CD11c(+) mononuclear cells in the pups. Maternal colonization reprograms intestinal transcriptional profiles of the offspring, including increased expression of genes encoding epithelial antibacterial peptides and metabolism of microbial molecules. Some of these effects are dependent on maternal antibodies that potentially retain microbial molecules and transmit them to the offspring during pregnancy and in milk. Pups born to mothers transiently colonized in pregnancy are better able to avoid inflammatory responses to microbial molecules and penetration of intestinal microbes.
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              How colonization by microbiota in early life shapes the immune system.

              Microbial colonization of mucosal tissues during infancy plays an instrumental role in the development and education of the host mammalian immune system. These early-life events can have long-standing consequences: facilitating tolerance to environmental exposures or contributing to the development of disease in later life, including inflammatory bowel disease, allergy, and asthma. Recent studies have begun to define a critical period during early development in which disruption of optimal host-commensal interactions can lead to persistent and in some cases irreversible defects in the development and training of specific immune subsets. Here, we discuss the role of early-life education of the immune system during this "window of opportunity," when microbial colonization has a potentially critical impact on human health and disease.
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                Author and article information

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                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of Pediatric Urology
                Journal of Pediatric Urology
                Elsevier BV
                14775131
                June 2022
                June 2022
                : 18
                : 3
                : 383-392
                Article
                10.1016/j.jpurol.2022.02.025
                35337731
                26481820-7d90-4c89-aa04-33f629fb5f91
                © 2022

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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