{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Maternal gestational diabetes mellitus associates with altered gut microbiome composition and head circumference abnormalities in male offspring. {Author}: Wang S;Liu Y;Tam WH;Ching JYL;Xu W;Yan S;Qin B;Lin L;Peng Y;Zhu J;Cheung CP;Ip KL;Wong YM;Cheong PK;Yeung YL;Kan WHB;Leung TF;Leung TY;Chang EB;Rubin DT;Claud EC;Wu WKK;Tun HM;Chan FKL;Ng SC;Zhang L; {Journal}: Cell Host Microbe {Volume}: 32 {Issue}: 7 {Year}: 2024 Jul 10 {Factor}: 31.316 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.chom.2024.06.005 {Abstract}: The impact of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) on maternal or infant microbiome trajectory remains poorly understood. Utilizing large-scale longitudinal fecal samples from 264 mother-baby dyads, we present the gut microbiome trajectory of the mothers throughout pregnancy and infants during the first year of life. GDM mothers had a distinct microbiome diversity and composition during the gestation period. GDM leaves fingerprints on the infant's gut microbiome, which are confounded by delivery mode. Further, Clostridium species positively correlate with a larger head circumference at month 12 in male offspring but not females. The gut microbiome of GDM mothers with male fetuses displays depleted gut-brain modules, including acetate synthesis I and degradation and glutamate synthesis II. The gut microbiome of female infants of GDM mothers has higher histamine degradation and dopamine degradation. Together, our integrative analysis indicates that GDM affects maternal and infant gut composition, which is associated with sexually dimorphic infant head growth.