PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Jessica E Flannery AU - Keaton Stagaman AU - Adam R Burns AU - Roxana J Hickey AU - Leslie E Roos AU - Ryan J Giuliano AU - Philip A Fisher AU - Thomas J Sharpton TI - Gut feelings begin in childhood: how the gut metagenome links to early environment, caregiving, and behavior AID - 10.1101/568717 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 568717 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/06/568717.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/06/568717.full AB - Psychosocial environments impact normative behavioral development in children, increasing the risk of problem behaviors and psychiatric disorders across the lifespan. Converging evidence demonstrates early normative development is affected by the gut microbiome, which itself can be altered by early psychosocial environments. Nevertheless, these relationships are poorly understood in childhood, particularly beyond peri- and postnatal microbial colonization. To determine the gut microbiome’s role in the associations between childhood adversity and behavioral development, we conducted a metagenomic investigation among cross-sectional sample of early school-aged children with a range of adverse experiences and caregiver stressors and relationships. Our results indicate that the taxonomic and functional composition of the gut microbiome links to behavioral dysregulation during a critical period of child development. Furthermore, our analysis reveals that both socioeconomic risk exposure and child behaviors associate with the relative abundances of specific taxa (e.g., Bacteroides and Bifidobacterium species) as well as functional modules encoded in their genomes (e.g., monoamine metabolism) that have been linked to cognition and health. We also identified heretofore novel linkages between gut microbiota, their functions, and behavior. These findings hold important translational implications for developmental psychology and microbiome sciences alike, as they suggest that caregiver behavior might mitigate the impact of socioeconomic risk on the microbiome and modify the relationship between subclinical symptoms of behavioral dysregulation and the gut microbiome in early school-aged children.