Aberrant newborn T cell and microbiota developmental trajectories predict respiratory compromise during infancy

新生儿T细胞和微生物群发育轨迹异常可预测婴儿期呼吸功能受损

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作者:Andrew McDavid ,Nathan Laniewski ,Alex Grier ,Ann L Gill ,Haeja A Kessler ,Heidie Huyck ,Elizabeth Carbonell ,Jeanne Holden-Wiltse ,Sanjukta Bandyopadhyay ,Jennifer Carnahan ,Andrew M Dylag ,David J Topham ,Ann R Falsey ,Mary T Caserta ,Gloria S Pryhuber ,Steven R Gill ,Kristin M Scheible

Abstract

Neonatal immune-microbiota co-development is poorly understood, yet age-appropriate recognition of - and response to - pathogens and commensal microbiota is critical to health. In this longitudinal study of 148 preterm and 119 full-term infants from birth through one year of age, we found that postmenstrual age or weeks from conception is a central factor influencing T cell and mucosal microbiota development. Numerous features of the T cell and microbiota functional development remain unexplained; however, by either age metric and are instead shaped by discrete perinatal and postnatal events. Most strikingly, we establish that prenatal antibiotics or infection disrupt the normal T cell population developmental trajectory, influencing subsequent respiratory microbial colonization and predicting respiratory morbidity. In this way, early exposures predict the postnatal immune-microbiota axis trajectory, placing infants at later risk for respiratory morbidity in early childhood.

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