Project description:Broad-spectrum antibiotics are frequently prescribed to children. The period of early-childhood represents a time where the developing microbiota may be more sensitive to environmental perturbations, which thus might have long-lasting host consequences. We hypothesized that even a single early-life broad-spectrum antibiotic course at a therapeutic dose (PAT) leads to durable alterations in both the gut microbiota and host immunity. In C57BL/6 mice, a single early-life tylosin (macrolide) course markedly altered the intestinal microbiome, and affected specific intestinal T-cell populations and secretory IgA expression, but PAT-exposed adult dams had minimal immunologic alterations. No immunological effects were detected in PAT-exposed germ-free animals; indicating that microbiota are required for the observed activities. Together these results indicate the impact of a single therapeutic early-life antibiotic course altering the microbiota and modulating host immune phenotypes that persist long after exposure has ceased.
Project description:The study of how gene expression in paneth cells changes after TNF admistration in mice were the microbiome has been depleted with broad spectrum antibiotics. The depletion of the microbiome excludes the occurence of indirect effects mediated through it by TNF on PC gene expression, only direct TNF effecs on crypt cells are measured
Project description:The most clinically relevant risk factor for Clostridioides difficile-associated disease (CDAD) is recent antibiotic treatment. Though most broad-spectrum antibiotics significantly disrupt the structure of the gut microbiota, only particular ones increase CDAD risk, suggesting additional factors might increase the risk from certain antibiotics. Here we show that commensal-independent effects of antibiotics collectively prime an in vitro germ-free human gut for CDAD. We found a marked loss of mucosal barrier and immune function with CDAD-associated antibiotic pretreatment distinct from pretreatment with an antibiotic unassociated with CDAD, which did not reduce innate immune or mucosal barrier functions. Importantly, pretreatment with CDAD-associated antibiotics sensitized mucosal barriers to C. difficile toxin activity in primary cell-derived enteroid monolayers. These data implicate commensal-independent host changes in the increased risk of CDAD with specific antibiotics. Our findings are contrary to the previously held belief that antibiotics allow for CDAD solely through disruption of the microbiome. We anticipate this work to suggest potential avenues of research for host-directed treatment and preventive therapies for CDAD, and to impact human tissue culturing protocols.
Project description:Colorectal cancer risk is associated with diets high in red meat. Heme, the pigment of red meat, induces cytotoxicity of colonic contents and elicits epithelial damage and compensatory hyperproliferation, leading to hyperplasia. Here we explore the possible causal role of the gut microbiota in heme-induced hyperproliferation. To this end, mice were fed a purified control or heme diet (0.5 μmol/g heme) with or without broad-spectrum antibiotics for 14 d. Heme-induced hyperproliferation was shown to depend on the presence of the gut microbiota, because hyperproliferation was completely eliminated by antibiotics, although heme-induced luminal cytotoxicity was sustained in these mice. Colon mucosa transcriptomics revealed that antibiotics block heme-induced differential expression of oncogenes, tumor suppressors, and cell turnover genes, implying that antibiotic treatment prevented the heme-dependent cytotoxic micelles to reach the epithelium. Our results indicate that this occurs because antibiotics reinforce the mucus barrier by eliminating sulfide-producing bacteria and mucin-degrading bacteria (e.g., Akkermansia). Sulfide potently reduces disulfide bonds and can drive mucin denaturation and microbial access to the mucus layer. This reduction results in formation of trisulfides that can be detected in vitro and in vivo. Therefore, trisulfides can serve as a novel marker of colonic mucolysis and thus as a proxy for mucus barrier reduction. In feces, antibiotics drastically decreased trisulfides but increased mucin polymers that can be lysed by sulfide. We conclude that the gut microbiota is required for heme-induced epithelial hyperproliferation and hyperplasia because of the capacity to reduce mucus barrier function. Mice were fed a Westernized high fat control diet, or the same diet supplemented with 0.5 µmol heme/g diet. One group of control and one group of heme mice received a mixture of broad spectrum Antibiotics (Abx) (ampicilin, neomycin and metronidazole) in their drinking water. After 14 days of intervention, mice were killed and gene expression was profiled in colon.
Project description:Antibiotics revolutionized medicine, however, it is now clear that broad-spectrum antibiotics alter the composition and function of the host’s microbiome. The microbiome plays a key role in human health and its perturbation is increasingly recognized as contributing to many human diseases. Wide spread broad-spectrum antibiotic use has also resulted in the emergence of multi-drug resistant pathogens, spurring development of pathogen-specific strategies such as monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to combat bacterial infection. Not only are pathogen-specific approaches not expected to induce resistance in non-targeted bacteria, but they are hypothesized to have minimal impact on the gut microbiome. Here, we compare the effects of antibiotics, pathogen-specific mAbs or their controls (saline or c-IgG) on the gut microbiome of 7-week-old, female, C57BL/6 mice. The magnitude of change in taxonomic abundance, bacterial diversity, and bacterial metabolites including short chain fatty acids (SCFA) and bile acids in the fecal pellets from mice treated with pathogen-specific mAbs was no different from animals treated with saline or an IgG control. Conversely, dramatic changes were observed in the relative abundance, as well as alpha- and beta-diversity, of the fecal microbiome, and bacterial metabolites in the feces of all antibiotic-treated mice. Taken together, these results indicate that pathogen-specific mAbs do not alter the fecal microbiome like broad-spectrum antibiotics and may represent a safer, more targeted approach to antibacterial therapy.
Project description:The human gut is colonized by trillions of microorganisms that influence human health and disease through the metabolism of xenobiotics, including therapeutic drugs and antibiotics. The diversity and metabolic potential of the human gut microbiome have been extensively characterized, but it remains unclear which microorganisms are active and which perturbations can influence this activity. Here, we use flow cytometry, 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and metatranscriptomics to demonstrate that the human gut contains distinctive subsets of active and damaged microorganisms, primarily composed of Firmicutes, which display marked temporal variation. Short-term exposure to a panel of xenobiotics resulted in significant changes in the physiology and gene expression of this active microbiome. Xenobiotic-responsive genes were found across multiple bacterial phyla, encoding novel candidate proteins for antibiotic resistance, drug metabolism, and stress response. These results demonstrate the power of moving beyond DNA-based measurements of microbial communities to better understand their physiology and metabolism. RNA-Seq analysis of the human gut microbiome during exposure to antibiotics and therapeutic drugs.
Project description:Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a heterogenous neurodevelopmental disorder with complex pathophysiology including both genetic and environmental factors. Recent evidence demonstrates the gut microbiome and its resultant metabolome can influence brain and behavior and have been implicated in ASD. To investigate gene by microbiome interactions in a model for genetic risk of ASD, we utilize mutant mice carrying a deletion of the ASD-associated Shank3 gene (Shank3KO). Shank3KO have altered microbiome composition and function at baseline in addition to social deficits. Further depletion of the microbiome with antibiotics exacerbates social deficits in Shank3KO, and results in transcriptional changes in the frontal cortex. Supplementation with the microbial metabolite acetate leads to reversal of social behavioral phenotypes even in mice with a depleted microbiome, and significantly alters transcriptional regulation in the prefrontal cortex. These results suggest a key role for the gut microbiome and the neuroactive metabolite acetate in regulating ASD-like behaviors.
Project description:Early life exposure to antibiotics alters the gut microbiome. These alterations lead to changes in metabolic homeostasis and an increase in host adiposity. We used microarrays to identify metabolic genes that may be up- or down-regulated secondary to antibiotic exposure. Low dose antibiotics have been widely used as growth promoters in the agricultural industry since the 1950’s, yet the mechanisms for this effect are unclear. Because antimicrobial agents of different classes and varying activity are effective across several vertebrate species, we hypothesized that such subtherapeutic administration alters the population structure of the gut microbiome as well as its metabolic capabilities. We generated a model of adiposity by giving subtherapeutic antibiotic therapy (STAT) to young mice and evaluated changes in the composition and capabilities of the gut microbiome. STAT administration increased adiposity in young mice and altered hormones related to metabolism. We observed substantial taxonomic changes in the microbiome, changes in copies of key genes involved in the metabolism of carbohydrates to short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), increases in colonic SCFA levels, and alterations in the regulation of hepatic metabolism of lipids and cholesterol. In this model, we demonstrate the alteration of early life murine metabolic homeostasis through antibiotic manipulation. C57BL6 mice were divided into low-dose penicillin or control groups. Given antibiotics via drinking water after weaning. Sacrificed and liver sections collected for RNA extraction.
Project description:Broad-spectrum antibiotics are frequently prescribed to children. The period of early-childhood represents a time where the developing microbiota may be more sensitive to environmental perturbations, which thus might have long-lasting host consequences. We hypothesized that even a single early-life broad-spectrum antibiotic course at a therapeutic dose (PAT) leads to durable alterations in both the gut microbiota and host immunity. In C57BL/6 mice, a single early-life tylosin (macrolide) course markedly altered the intestinal microbiome, and affected specific intestinal T-cell populations and secretory IgA expression, but PAT-exposed adult dams had minimal immunologic alterations. No immunological effects were detected in PAT-exposed germ-free animals; indicating that microbiota are required for the observed activities. Transfer of PAT-perturbed microbiota led to delayed sIgA expression indicating that the altered microbiota is sufficient to transfer PAT-induced effects. PAT exposure had lasting and transferable effects on microbial community network structure. Together these results indicate the impact of a single therapeutic early-life antibiotic course altering the microbiota and modulating host immune phenotypes that persist long after exposure has ceased.