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Long-Term Effects of Early-Life Antibiotic Exposure on Resistance to Subsequent Bacterial Infection

Authors :
Claire Roubaud-Baudron
Victoria E. Ruiz
Alexander M. Swan
Bruce A. Vallance
Ceren Ozkul
Zhiheng Pei
Jackie Li
Thomas W. Battaglia
Guillermo I. Perez-Perez
Martin J. Blaser
Source :
mBio, Vol 10, Iss 6 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2019.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Early-life antibiotic exposure may provoke long-lasting microbiota perturbation. Since a healthy gut microbiota confers resistance to enteric pathogens, we hypothesized that early-life antibiotic exposure would worsen the effects of a bacterial infection encountered as an adult. To test this hypothesis, C57BL/6 mice received a 5-day course of tylosin (macrolide), amoxicillin (β-lactam), or neither (control) early in life and were challenged with Citrobacter rodentium up to 80 days thereafter. The early-life antibiotic course led to persistent alterations in the intestinal microbiota and even with pathogen challenge 80 days later worsened the subsequent colitis. Compared to exposure to amoxicillin, exposure to tylosin led to greater disease severity and microbiota perturbation. Transferring the antibiotic-perturbed microbiota to germfree animals led to worsened colitis, indicating that the perturbed microbiota was sufficient for the increased disease susceptibility. These experiments highlight the long-term effects of early-life antibiotic exposure on susceptibility to acquired pathogens. IMPORTANCE The gastrointestinal microbiota protects hosts from enteric infections; while antibiotics, by altering the microbiota, may diminish this protection. We show that after early-life exposure to antibiotics host susceptibility to enhanced Citrobacter rodentium-induced colitis is persistent and that this enhanced disease susceptibility is transferable by the antibiotic-altered microbiota. These results strongly suggest that early-life antibiotics have long-term consequences on the gut microbiota and enteropathogen infection susceptibility.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21507511
Volume :
10
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
mBio
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2c91dfe35c994798aec305fa5fefdb6b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02820-19