Journal article

Neonatal antibiotics have long term sex-dependent effects on the enteric nervous system

SSB Poon, LY Hung, Q Wu, P Parathan, N Yalcinkaya, A Haag, RA Luna, JC Bornstein, TC Savidge, JPP Foong

Journal of Physiology | Published : 2022

Abstract

Abstract: Infants and young children receive the highest exposures to antibiotics globally. Although there is building evidence that early life exposure to antibiotics increases susceptibility to various diseases including gut disorders later in life, the lasting impact of early life antibiotics on the physiology of the gut and its enteric nervous system (ENS) remains unclear. We treated neonatal mice with the antibiotic vancomycin during their first 10 postnatal days, then examined potential lasting effects of the antibiotic treatment on their colons during young adulthood (6 weeks old). We found that neonatal vancomycin treatment disrupted the gut functions of young adult female and male m..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by University of Melbourne


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Project grants APP1099016 to J.P.P.F., J.C.B. and T.C.S., and Australian Research Council grant #DP130101596 to J.C.B., NIDDK P30-DK56338 and R01DK130517, NIAID U01-AI24290 and P01-AI152999, and NINR R01-NR013497 to T.C.S., and the University of Melbourne International Research and Fee Remission Scholarship to L.Y.H., and the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship to S.S.B.P.