A History of Repeated Antibiotic Usage Leads to Microbiota-dependent Mucus Defects
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Recent evidence indicates that repeated antibiotic usage lowers microbial diversity and ultimately changes the gut microbiota community. However, the physiological effects of repeated - but not recent - antibiotic usage on microbiota-mediated mucosal barrier function are largely unknown. By selecting human individuals from the deeply phenotyped Estonian Microbiome Cohort (EstMB), we here utilized human-to-mouse fecal microbiota transplantation to explore long-term impacts of repeated antibiotic use on intestinal mucus function. While a healthy mucus layer protects the intestinal epithelium against infection and inflammation, using mucus function analyses of viable colonic tissue explants, we show that microbiota from humans with a history of repeated antibiotic use causes reduced mucus growth rate and increased mucus penetrability compared to healthy controls in the transplanted mice. Moreover, shotgun metagenomic sequencing identified a significantly altered microbiota composition in the antibiotic-shaped microbial community, with known mucus-utilizing bacteria, including and , dominating in the gut. The altered microbiota composition was further characterized by a distinct metabolite profile, which may be caused by differential mucus degradation capacity. Consequently, our proof-of-concept study suggests that long-term antibiotic use in humans can result in an altered microbial community that has reduced capacity to maintain proper mucus function in the gut.
Leonard R, Pasquereau-Kotula E, Madec E, Marsac B, Mihalache A, du Merle L Gut Microbes. 2024; 16(1):2426609.
PMID: 39543081 PMC: 11572077. DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2024.2426609.
Antibiotics damage the colonic mucus barrier in a microbiota-independent manner.
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PMID: 39259805 PMC: 11389797. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adp4119.