J 2025

Sampling frequency matters: mapping of the healthy infants' gut microbiome during the first year of life

KOSEČKOVÁ MICENKOVÁ, Lenka; Soňa SMETANOVÁ; Jacek MARCINIAK; Kristýna BRODÍKOVÁ; Dominika POLAŠTÍK KLEKNEROVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Sampling frequency matters: mapping of the healthy infants' gut microbiome during the first year of life

Authors

KOSEČKOVÁ MICENKOVÁ, Lenka; Soňa SMETANOVÁ; Jacek MARCINIAK; Kristýna BRODÍKOVÁ; Dominika POLAŠTÍK KLEKNEROVÁ; Barbora LAKOTOVÁ; Barbora ZWINSOVÁ; Vojtěch THON; Petra VÍDEŇSKÁ and Eva BUDINSKÁ

Edition

Current Research in Microbial Sciences, Elsevier B.V. 2025, 2666-5174

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Netherlands

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Přírodovědecká fakulta – Repository – Repository

UT WoS

001582768200001

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-105015814499

Keywords in English

Infant; Newborn; Gut; Microbiome; Sequencing; Sampling

Links

EF17_043/0009632, research and development project. LM2018121, research and development project. LM2023069, research and development project. LX22NPO5103, research and development project. 857560, interní kód Repo. e-INFRA CZ II, large research infrastructures.
Changed: 31/10/2025 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Early life events significantly influence the developing gut microbiome, yet the response time and duration of microbiome changes to specific factors, such as vaccination or solid food introduction, remain unclear. Consequently, determining the optimal sampling frequency to monitor gut microbiome development is challenging. This study monitored gut microbiome plasticity using 16S rRNA gene sequencing almost daily in one infant (A) and weekly in 12 others (B–M) during their first year. Changes were linked to external factors and their duration analyzed. Three bacterial colonization groups emerged: "Early-life colonizers," "Re-appearing colonizers," and "Later-colonizers." Weekly sampling underestimated microbiome variability, as individual samples within the same week differed by over 1 Shannon index, and most of the weekly coefficients of variation of different alpha diversity indices in the first 23 weeks were higher than 10 %. Alpha diversity variability decreased with age, but beta diversity variability remained high. Key events like solid food introduction and probiotics caused gradual but significant bacterial composition changes, with effects varying among infants. Sparse weekly sampling hindered a detailed understanding of the impact of maternal microbiome, diet, probiotics, vaccinations, and unforeseen variables. Analysis of weekly variability in alpha and beta diversity suggests that such rare sampling may not be sufficient in terms of the outcomes of interest.

Files attached