Human milk contains a diverse array of bioactives and is also a source of bacteria for the developing infant gut. The aim of this study was to characterize the bacterial communities in human milk and infant faeces over the first 3 months of life, in 10 mother-infant pairs. The presence of viable Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in human milk was also evaluated. MiSeq sequencing revealed a large diversity of the human milk microbiota, identifying over 207 bacterial genera in milk samples. The phyla Proteobacteria and Firmicutes and the genera Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus and Streptococcus were the predominant bacterial groups. A core of 12 genera represented 81% of the microbiota relative abundance in milk samples at week 1, 3 and 6, decreas...
Mother's own milk represents the optimal source for preterm infant nutrition, as it promotes immune ...
: Human milk contains a number of nutritional and bioactive molecules including microorganisms that ...
Our objective was to investigate the effects of different delivery and feeding modes on the gut micr...
peer-reviewedHuman milk contains a diverse array of bioactives and is also a source of bacteria for ...
SCOPE: Understanding biological functions of different free human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in sh...
Human milk is known to carry its own microbiota, of which the precise origin remains obscure. Breast...
Breast milk is considered the gold standard feeding regime for new-born infants. It provides complet...
ObjectivesThis study tested the hypothesis that the fecal bacterial genera of breast-fed (BF) and fo...
Several factors affect gut microbiota development in early life, among which breastfeeding plays a k...
Several bacterial species initially colonise the infant gut, but are outcompeted. Human milk oligosa...
Scope: Understanding the biological functions of human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in shaping gastr...
Objectives: The aim was of this study is to identify a link between the total amount of breast milk...
Breastfeeding is one of the major factors affecting the early development of the infant gut microbio...
Background: Microbial communities in human milk and those in feces from breastfed infants vary withi...
Mother's own milk represents the optimal source for preterm infant nutrition, as it promotes immune ...
: Human milk contains a number of nutritional and bioactive molecules including microorganisms that ...
Our objective was to investigate the effects of different delivery and feeding modes on the gut micr...
peer-reviewedHuman milk contains a diverse array of bioactives and is also a source of bacteria for ...
SCOPE: Understanding biological functions of different free human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in sh...
Human milk is known to carry its own microbiota, of which the precise origin remains obscure. Breast...
Breast milk is considered the gold standard feeding regime for new-born infants. It provides complet...
ObjectivesThis study tested the hypothesis that the fecal bacterial genera of breast-fed (BF) and fo...
Several factors affect gut microbiota development in early life, among which breastfeeding plays a k...
Several bacterial species initially colonise the infant gut, but are outcompeted. Human milk oligosa...
Scope: Understanding the biological functions of human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in shaping gastr...
Objectives: The aim was of this study is to identify a link between the total amount of breast milk...
Breastfeeding is one of the major factors affecting the early development of the infant gut microbio...
Background: Microbial communities in human milk and those in feces from breastfed infants vary withi...
Mother's own milk represents the optimal source for preterm infant nutrition, as it promotes immune ...
: Human milk contains a number of nutritional and bioactive molecules including microorganisms that ...
Our objective was to investigate the effects of different delivery and feeding modes on the gut micr...