Henna-Maria Uusitupa: How the gut microbes you're born with affect your lifelong health
Henna-Maria Uusitupa investigates innovative solutions to minimize health risks that infants might have due to disruptions in microbiota development. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
proven the opposite.
a little bit more complex,
with the little microbial bodies
during evolution.
that right combination right at birth.
and babies born vaginally
countless different early life events
the gut microbiota is developing,
prescribed for the infant or the mother,
clean all the time.
both mothers and infants.
and circumstances play a huge role
on the lifelong health of that baby.
small health implications here.
diseases like obesity, diabetes
early life events I just listed
have been invented to save lives,
are prescribed for a valid reason,
of such early life events
microbiota development.
of an infant health platform,
to find a solution to every day at work,
I'm aiming to answer in this talk,
at lifelong health,
or what early life events they encounter.
the right combination of microbes?
that inhabit our bodies
like a colonization march.
that inhabit our bodies first
are able to move in,
the infrastructure
is greatly altered,
fecal and skin bacteria of the mother,
enter the infant gut.
to a totally different tone,
to what we've adapted to during evolution,
for C-section-born babies later on.
as an example here.
in several studies
of developing diseases
from those individuals
to be obese or overweight.
that those same microbes
who are born by C-section
of antibiotics in early life.
many antibiotics early in life
or overweight, even by 50 percent,
be thinking at this point
or I was born via C-section
a little help with that.
been known to help is breastfeeding.
nutrients for the baby,
for the good microbes as well.
are not breastfed.
those babies who are not breastfed
those disruptive early life events
their gut microbiota development?
solution part of this talk.
has been taking giant steps lately.
that if there are some microbes missing,
when they are ingested, probiotics,
during the years,
of eczema later in life.
were turned to breast milk.
is able to support the healthy development
after their initial discovery.
the third-largest group of solids,
by humans, not even infants.
something to breast milk,
when it was finally understood
the microbes that are best for infants,
of different HMO structures,
some of them also in the lab,
from breast milk
disruptive early life events.
is still ongoing
of us scientists.
towards understanding better and better
in various situations
with which probiotics
particular baby in that particular case.
breastfed baby has the microbiota
the negative health consequences.
a world for a while,
such a health care system
to a health care check,
microbiota development of that baby,
to restore the microbiota
would be extremely rare
health care system?
of future would be possible?
and I want to contribute
has an equal starting point for life
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Henna-Maria Uusitupa - Microbiome researcherHenna-Maria Uusitupa investigates innovative solutions to minimize health risks that infants might have due to disruptions in microbiota development.
Why you should listen
Henna-Maria Uusitupa has devoted her post-doctoral career to understanding the programming effects of early life nutrition on infant metabolic, cognitive and microbiota development. Currently, Uusitupa is working at DuPont Nutrition and Biosciences as a Senior Scientist and Technical Lead of Infant Health Platform based in Kantvik, Finland. She has one clear goal in her mind: to find the right product combination to restore the microbiota of infants after disruptions.
Uusitupa earned her bachelor of science, master of science and doctor of philosophy degrees in food chemistry from University of Turku, department of biochemistry and food chemistry. She has a strong background in clinical trials including her PhD research in metabolic health, and more recently she has also focused on exploring human breast milk and its components as well as probiotics as modifiers of infant development and health.
Henna-Maria Uusitupa | Speaker | TED.com