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

Author:

Roubaud-Baudron Claire123,Ruiz Victoria E.34,Swan Alexander M.3,Vallance Bruce A.5,Ozkul Ceren36,Pei Zhiheng7,Li Jackie3,Battaglia Thomas W.3,Perez-Perez Guillermo I.3,Blaser Martin J.38ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CHU Bordeaux, Pôle de Gérontologie Clinique, Bordeaux, France

2. University of Bordeaux, INSERM, UMR1053 Bordeaux Research in Translational Oncology, BaRITOn, Bordeaux, France

3. Department of Medicine, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York, USA

4. Department of Biology, St. Francis College, Brooklyn, New York, USA

5. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

6. Department of Pharmaceutical Microbiology, Hacettepe University School of Pharmacy, Ankara, Turkey

7. Department of Pathology, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York, USA

8. Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA

Abstract

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.

Funder

CHU Hopitaux de Bordeaux

Groupe Pasteur Mutualite

Societe de geriatrie de Bordeaux et du Sud Ouest

NIH

ASM undergraduate research fellowship

C&D Fund

Zlinkoff Foundation

Transatlantic Program of the Foundation Leducq

Philippe Foundation

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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