Abstract
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) colonization during pregnancy is a major cause of neonatal infection, yet its microbial determinants remain unclear. This pilot study compared the vaginal and gut microbiota of late-pregnancy women with and without GBS colonization to explore potential microbial cues for peripartum risk stratification. Forty-three Japanese pregnant women (GBS-Negative = 34; GBS-Positive = 9) were enrolled at 35-37 weeks of gestation. Vaginal secretions and stool were analyzed by 16S rRNA (V3-V4) sequencing using QIIME 2 with SILVA annotation and community state type (CST) classification. Vaginal communities were mainly Lactobacillus-dominant. GBS-Positive women showed a non-significant tendency toward more L. iners-dominant CST III and fewer L. crispatus-dominant CST I compared with GBS-Negative women. Prevotella, Atopobium, and Gardnerella were significantly enriched in the GBS-Positive group (false discovery rate < 0.05), whereas gut microbial diversity and composition showed no significant differences between groups. Cross-site gut-vagina genus-level correlations were generally weak and non-significant. These findings suggest that, in late pregnancy, GBS colonization is linked to subtle shifts within Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal communities, with more L. iners and bacterial vaginosis-associated genera, rather than global microbiota disruption. The apparent shift from L. crispatus- to L. iners-dominant communities is hypothesis-generating and should be confirmed in larger cohorts.