Healthy gut microbes in 6-week-old infants linked to lower risk of malaria during first year of life

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by University of Florida

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In a small study in the Democratic Republic of Congo, 6-week-old infants with healthy gut microbiomes were less likely to contract malaria in their first year of life. While the study is preliminary, it suggests the possibility that treatments such as probiotics could protect against malaria, which kills more than 600,000 people a year, primarily children in sub-Saharan Africa. Potential clinical applications would require more research, however.

The work was led by researchers at the University of Florida in collaboration with HEAL Africa Hospital in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, a country that accounts for more than 10% of all malaria deaths. Scientists tracked 47 mother-infant pairs and collected stool samples throughout the babies' first year of life while monitoring for malaria infections.

"The microbiome at six weeks old was able to predict whether that infant was going to go on to have malaria at any time during the subsequent year of life," said Julie Moore, Ph.D., a professor of infectious diseases in the UF College of Veterinary Medicine and senior author of the new report.

"It's way too early to propose that giving infants probiotics is something that should be done in malarious areas, but it's certainly something that we can think about."

The work grew out of a collaboration between Moore and UF professors Christopher Dutton, Ph.D., and Connie Mulligan, Ph.D. Mulligan, a genetic anthropologist, has worked with the team at HEAL Africa Hospital since 2010.

Dutton and Moore tested the relationship between microbiomes and susceptibility to malaria in animal models. Combining their expertise, the scientists asked whether a healthy gut could protect against malaria in babies.

They published their findings in Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology.

Babies who remained malaria-free tended to have gut bacteria commonly associated with healthy development, particularly microbes typically found in breastfed infants. In contrast, infants who later developed malaria showed higher levels of bacteria more often linked to inflammation.

"We saw some of the usual suspects that we would expect in a healthy infant gut microbiome, like Bifidobacterium," Moore said. "And then there are bad guys like Klebsiella, which are associated with an unhealthy gut."

The findings align with a growing body of research on gut microbes and human health. Scientists suspect that beneficial microbes help train the developing immune system, while less healthy microbial communities may leave infants more vulnerable to infections. But the exact link between gut microbes and infections like malaria remains unclear.

"The role of the infant gut microbiome in general, in terms of determining outcomes of any infection, is not very well understood," Moore said.

The findings came with an important caveat. Babies who slept under insecticide-treated bed nets were also less likely to develop malaria. Because bed-net use—not just the gut microbiome—was also linked to malaria outcomes, the researchers say larger studies are needed to determine how much of the observed effect can be attributed to the gut microbiome itself.

Still, the results offer a glimpse into how a baby's earliest microbial companions might influence health months later.

"The next study that I would love to do is to look at immune development in these infants and assess whether there are differences in their immune responses over the first year of life that track differences in their gut microbiota," Moore said.

More information

Christopher L. Dutton et al, The gut microbiome in early life predicts malaria susceptibility, Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (2026). DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2026.1769376

Key medical concepts

MalariaFlora, IntestinalBifidobacterium

Clinical categories

Infectious diseasesChildren's healthPediatricsCommon illnesses & Prevention Provided by University of Florida Who's behind this story?

Sadie Harley

BSc Life Sciences & Ecology. Microbiology lab background with pharmaceutical news experience in oil, gas, and renewable industries. Full profile →

Andrew Zinin

Master's in physics with research experience. Long-time science news enthusiast. Plays key role in Science X's editorial success. Full profile →

Citation: Healthy gut microbes in 6-week-old infants linked to lower risk of malaria during first year of life (2026, June 25) retrieved 25 June 2026 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-06-healthy-gut-microbes-week-infants.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.