The early life gut microbiota in the developmental origins of health & disease, with Dr. Anne Salonen PhD

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This episode features Dr. Anne Salonen PhD from University of Helsinki (Finland) speaking about her studies on the gut microbiota in early life and how it relates to health and disease. She noted that while mode of delivery (C-section or vaginal birth) is the largest factor affecting microbiota composition for the first weeks and months of life, the immunological and functional microbiota consequences of this are still unknown. However, there appear to be ‘windows of opportunity’ in which microorganisms can influence the development of the immune system, which have lasting consequences for health. Dr. Salonen describes her Finnish HELMi birth cohort, a longitudinal, prospective general population birth cohort, set up to identify factors that modify the gut microbiota and how they relate to child health and wellbeing. Children from 1055 families were sampled frequently in the first 2 years of life and followed as they grew older. The findings confirmed that early-life microbiota composition was a risk factor (among others) for certain diseases as the children developed. Prof. Salonen also described her study on inoculating the infant gut with maternal gut microbiota via milk feeding after C-section birth. They found, in an initial small study, that the gut microbiota of the infants became similar to vaginally born infants. She sees this type of inoculation as a research tool, and says the field will progress toward standardized, reproducible interventions in this area.

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About Dr. Anne Salonen:

Dr. Anne Salonen is a principal investigator and director of the Human Microbiome Research Program at the Medical Faculty, University of Helsinki. Her research is focused on the intestinal microbiota in health and disease, especially in early life and in relation to diet. Dr. Salonen is a PI of the Finnish Health and Early Life Microbiota (HELMI) birth cohort and involved in maternal fecal microbiota transplantation studies in C-section infants. She is the coordinator of the European Innovation Council Pathfinder project on gut microbiota in precision nutrition (fibrematch.eu). Dr. Salonen’s research also entails female reproductive tract microbiota in relation to reproductive outcomes and Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) infection. Research methodology in Salonen laboratory ranges from NGS and other omics technologies to culture-based microbiology of anaerobes, including application and development of bioinformatic tools for microbiome research. More on our research at https://www.helsinki.fi/en/researchgroups/microbes-inside.