A mother’s touch: microbial guardians of early immune imprinting. Melody Y Zeng

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Trends Immunol. 2025 Oct 6:S1471-4906(25)00227-3. doi: 10.1016/j.it.2025.09.008. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The evolution of the fetal immune system within the womb is a delicate balancing act: it is trained to not reject maternal antigens, while equipping itself with ‘learned’ immunity to survive and thrive in the outside world. In this opinion article, we propose that a deliberate maternal touch via immune and nutritional influences, orchestrated, in part, by microbiota-derived components, imprints the fetal immune system with the needed immune memory and epigenetic marks to navigate a far less nurturing outside world, including early microbial colonizers in the newborn’s intestine, pathogens and irritants, and allergens in food. We redefine the hygiene hypothesis to include prenatal maternal microbial exposures, priming fetal immune development for long-term fitness and reduced inflammatory/autoimmune disease risk.

PMID:41058380 | DOI:10.1016/j.it.2025.09.008

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