Donor human milk microbiota: a comparison with preterm human milk microbiota and the effect of pasteurization, a pilot study
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA849176)
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA849176)
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Description: Human milk (HM) is the best feeding option for preterm infants; however, when mother's own milk (MOM) is not available, pasteurized donor human milk (DHM) is the best alternative. In this study, we profiled DHM microbiota (19 samples) using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and compared its compositional features with the MOM microbiota (14 samples) from mothers who delivered prematurely (PT-MOM). As a secondary study aim, we assessed the specific effect of pasteurization on the characteristics of the DHM microbiota. DHM showed significantly higher alpha diversity and significant segregation from PT-MOM. Compositionally, the PT-MOM mi-crobiota had a significantly higher proportion of Staphylococcus than DHM, with Streptococcus tending to be and Pseudomonas being significantly overrepresented in DHM compared with the PT-MOM samples. Furthermore, pasteurization affected the HM microbiota structure, with a trend towards greater biodiversity and some compositional differences following pasteuriza-tion. This pilot study provided further evidence on the HM microbial ecosystem, demonstrating that the DHM microbiota differs from the PT-MOM microbiota, possibly due to inherent differ-ences between HM donors and mothers delivering prematurely, and that pasteurization per se impacts the HM microbiota. Knowledge about HM microbiota needs to be acquired by investi-gating the effect of DHM processing to develop strategies aimed at improving DHM quality while guaranteeing its microbiological safety.
Data type: raw sequence reads
Sample scope: Multispecies
Organization: University of Bologna
Last updated: 2022-06-14