Unveiling early-life microbial colonization profile through characterizing low-biomass maternal-infant microbiomes by 2bRAD-M

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Abstract

Introduction: The microbial composition of human breast milk and infant meconium offers critical insights into the early microbial colonization profile, and it greatly contributes to the infant’s immune system and long-term health outcomes. However, analyzing these samples often faces technical challenges and limitations of low-resolution using conventional approaches due to their low microbial biomass. Methods: Here, we employed the type IIB restriction enzymes site-associated DNA sequencing for microbiome (2bRAD-M) as a reduced metagenomics method to address these issues and profile species-level microbial composition. We collected breast milk samples, maternal feces, and infant meconium, comparing the results from 2bRAD-M with those from both commonly used 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and the gold-standard whole metagenomics sequencing (WMS). Results: The accuracy and robustness of 2bRAD-M were demonstrated through its consistently high correlation of microbial individual abundance and low whole-community-level distance with the paired WMS samples. Moreover, 2bRAD-M enabled us to identify clinical variables associated with infant microbiota variations and significant changes in microbial diversity across different lactation stages of breast milk. Discussion: This study underscores the importance of employing 2bRAD-M in future large-scale and longitudinal studies on maternal and infant microbiomes, thereby enhancing our understanding of microbial colonization in early life stages and demonstrating further translational potential.

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Hou, S., Jiang, Y., Zhang, F., Cheng, T., Zhao, D., Yao, J., … Huang, S. (2025). Unveiling early-life microbial colonization profile through characterizing low-biomass maternal-infant microbiomes by 2bRAD-M. Frontiers in Microbiology, 16. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2025.1521108

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