Baby-to-baby strain transmission shapes the developing gut microbiome

The early infant microbiome is largely primed by microbial transmission from the mother between birth and the first few weeks of life, but how interpersonal transmission further shapes the developing microbiome in the first year remains unexplored.

 

Here we report a metagenomic survey to model microbiome transmission in the nursery setting among babies attending the first year, their educators and their families (n = 134 individuals). We performed dense longitudinal microbiome sampling (n = 1,013 faecal samples) during the first year of nursery and tracked microbial strain transmission within and between nursery groups across 3 different facilities.

 

We detected extensive baby-to-baby microbiome transmission within nursery groups even after only 1 month of nursery attendance, with nursery-acquired strains accounting for a proportion of the infant gut microbiome comparable to that from family by the end of the first term. Baby-to-baby transmission continued to grow over the nursery year, in an increasingly intricate transmission network with single strains spreading in some classes, and with multiple baby-acquisition and species-transmissibility patterns.

 

Having siblings was associated with higher microbiome diversity and reduced strain acquisition from nursery peers, while antibiotic treatment was the condition that most accounted for the increased influx of strains.

 

This study shows that microbiome transmission between babies is extensive during the first year of nursery, and points to social interactions in infancy as crucial drivers of infant microbiome development.

 

 

For more information:

Ricci, L., Heidrich, V., Punčochář, M. et al. Baby-to-baby strain transmission shapes the developing gut microbiome. Nature (2026). DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09983-z