From Alpha Diversity to Zzz: Interactions among sleep, the brain, and gut microbiota in the first year of life

•Infant sleep habits and neurophysiology are associated with their gut microbiome.•This sleep-brain-gut link is important for infant development.•Sleep and gut microbiota are promising targets for early interventions. Sleep disorders have been linked to alterations of gut microbiota composition in a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Progress in neurobiology Vol. 209; p. 102208
Main Authors: Schoch, S.F., Castro-Mejía, J.L., Krych, L., Leng, B., Kot, W., Kohler, M., Huber, R., Rogler, G., Biedermann, L., Walser, J.C., Nielsen, D.S., Kurth, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-02-2022
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Summary:•Infant sleep habits and neurophysiology are associated with their gut microbiome.•This sleep-brain-gut link is important for infant development.•Sleep and gut microbiota are promising targets for early interventions. Sleep disorders have been linked to alterations of gut microbiota composition in adult humans and animal models, but it is unclear how this link develops. With longitudinal assessments in 162 healthy infants, we present a so far unrecognized sleep-brain-gut interrelationship. First, we report a link between sleep habits and gut microbiota: daytime sleep is associated with bacterial diversity, and nighttime sleep fragmentation and variability are linked with bacterial maturity and enterotype. Second, we demonstrate a sleep-brain-gut link: bacterial diversity and enterotype are associated with sleep neurophysiology. Third, we show that the sleep-brain-gut link is relevant in development: sleep habits and bacterial markers predict behavioral-developmental outcomes. Our results demonstrate the dynamic interplay between sleep, gut microbiota, and the maturation of brain and behavior during infancy, which aligns with the newly emerging concept of a sleep-brain-gut axis. Importantly, sleep and gut microbiota represent promising health targets since both can be modified non-invasively. As many adult diseases root in early childhood, leveraging protective factors of adequate sleep and age-appropriate gut microbiota in infancy could constitute a health promoting factor across the entire human lifespan.
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ISSN:0301-0082
1873-5118
DOI:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2021.102208