Gut microbiome development in early childhood is affected by day care attendance

Amnon Amir, Ortal Erez-Granat, Tzipi Braun, Katya Sosnovski, Rotem Hadar, Marina BenShoshan, Sophia Heiman, Haya Abbas-Egbariya, Efrat Glick Saar, Gilat Efroni, Yael Haberman*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

The human gut microbiome develops during the first years of life, followed by a relatively stable adult microbiome. Day care attendance is a drastic change that exposes children to a large group of peers in a diverse environment for prolonged periods, at this critical time of microbial development, and therefore has the potential to affect microbial composition. We characterize the effect of day care on the gut microbial development throughout a single school year in 61 children from 4 different day care facilities, and in additional 24 age-matched home care children (n = 268 samples, median age of entering the study was 12 months). We show that day care attendance is a significant and impactful factor in shaping the microbial composition of the growing child, the specific daycare facility and class influence the gut microbiome, and each child becomes more similar to others in their day care. Furthermore, in comparison to home care children, day care children have a different gut microbial composition, with enrichment of taxa more frequently observed in older populations. Our results provide evidence that daycare may be an external factor that contributes to gut microbiome maturation and make-up in early childhood.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2
Journalnpj Biofilms and Microbiomes
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2022

Funding

FundersFunder number
Sheba Medical Center
Sheba Microbiome Center
Bill and Melinda Gates FoundationOPP1144149
Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust
H2020 European Research Council
European Commission758313
Israel Science Foundation908/15
Israeli Centers for Research Excellence41/11

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