Antibiotics promote intestinal growth of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae by enriching nutrients and depleting microbial metabolites

Author:

Yip Alexander Y. G.ORCID,King Olivia G.,Omelchenko OleksiiORCID,Kurkimat Sanjana,Horrocks VictoriaORCID,Mostyn Phoebe,Danckert Nathan,Ghani Rohma,Satta Giovanni,Jauneikaite ElitaORCID,Davies Frances J.,Clarke Thomas B.ORCID,Mullish Benjamin H.ORCID,Marchesi Julian R.,McDonald Julie A. K.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe intestine is the primary colonisation site for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and serves as a reservoir of CRE that cause invasive infections (e.g. bloodstream infections). Broad-spectrum antibiotics disrupt colonisation resistance mediated by the gut microbiota, promoting the expansion of CRE within the intestine. Here, we show that antibiotic-induced reduction of gut microbial populations leads to an enrichment of nutrients and depletion of inhibitory metabolites, which enhances CRE growth. Antibiotics decrease the abundance of gut commensals (including Bifidobacteriaceae and Bacteroidales) in ex vivo cultures of human faecal microbiota; this is accompanied by depletion of microbial metabolites and enrichment of nutrients. We measure the nutrient utilisation abilities, nutrient preferences, and metabolite inhibition susceptibilities of several CRE strains. We find that CRE can use the nutrients (enriched after antibiotic treatment) as carbon and nitrogen sources for growth. These nutrients also increase in faeces from antibiotic-treated mice and decrease following intestinal colonisation with carbapenem-resistant Escherichia coli. Furthermore, certain microbial metabolites (depleted upon antibiotic treatment) inhibit CRE growth. Our results show that killing gut commensals with antibiotics facilitates CRE colonisation by enriching nutrients and depleting inhibitory microbial metabolites.

Funder

RCUK | Medical Research Council

- Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund Springboard Fellowship - Start-up funds from the Department of Life Sciences at Imperial College London.

Rosetrees Trust and the Stoneygate Trust

Medical Research Council (MRC) Clinical Academic Research Partnership Scheme

UKRI Impact Accelerator Award

NIHR Academic Clinical Lectureship

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

Reference88 articles.

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