New research investigates how maternal factors during pregnancy affect small particles produced by the body’s microbiota, giving insights into a new way to monitor maternal and fetal health during pregnancy.
The study, published in BMC Medicine, analysed stool and amniotic fluid samples from 60 pregnant women. Researchers investigated how maternal factors during pregnancy affect small particles produced by the body’s microbiota, known as extracellular vesicles. These are signalling particles released by bacteria that enable microbes to communicate with one another and influence the host’s cells.

“Microbiota-derived vesicles are likely one of the most important communication mechanisms between the microbes in our bodies and our cells. The fetal environment refers to the conditions surrounding the fetus in the womb, including the amniotic fluid. Microbiota signalling within the fetal environment, and changes in that signalling, may have a significant impact on the development of the fetal immune system, for example,” says Jenni Turunen, Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Oulu.
Maternal variation
The researchers found that the profile of microbiota-derived vesicles in both the gut and amniotic fluid varied between mothers. Maternal overweight, obesity, gestational diabetes and weight gain of more than 15 kilograms during pregnancy were associated with microbiota-derived vesicle profiles, particularly in amniotic fluid. In these mothers, the proportion of vesicles produced by certain bacterial groups was lower than in the other study participants.
Previous studies have identified associations between maternal weight and the composition of the microbiota during pregnancy. In addition, the fetus was long thought to develop in a sterile environment. The newly published study is among the first to examine the interaction between microbiota-derived vesicles and pregnancy-related factors, with a particular focus on the fetal environment.
Health monitoring during pregnancy
According to Turunen, microbiota-derived vesicles could offer new opportunities for monitoring health during pregnancy.
“In the future, microbiota-derived vesicles could serve as biomarkers of maternal and fetal health, for example. However, before any clinical applications can be considered, we need a better understanding of the functions of these vesicles in the body. Our research group is already carrying out further studies to investigate these questions,” Turunen says.
Topics
- amniotic fluid
- fetal environment
- fetal health
- gestational diabetes
- Gut Microbiome
- Human Microbiome
- Jenni Turunen
- maternal health
- maternal weight
- Medical Microbiology
- Microbial Characterisation
- Microbiome & Pregnancy
- microbiota
- obesity
- pregnancy
- Reproductive &Urinary Tract Microbiome
- Research
- Research News
- UK & Rest of Europe
- University of Oulu
- weight gain
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