4.6 Article

Amoxicillin Increased Functional Pathway Genes and Beta-Lactam Resistance Genes by Pathogens Bloomed in Intestinal Microbiota Using a Simulator of the Human Intestinal Microbial Ecosystem

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01213

Keywords

amoxicillin; antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs); functional pathway genes; human intestinal microbiota; simulator of the human intestinal microbial ecosystem (SHIME)

Categories

Funding

  1. Key projects of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [41831287]
  2. ChinaNational Funds for Distinguished Young Scientists [41525013]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870351, 41703088, 31670509, 21607016]
  4. Key projects of Research and Development of Hebei Province [19273707D]
  5. Key projects of Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [19JCZDJC40800]

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Antibiotics are frequently used to treat bacterial infections; however, they affect not only the target pathogen but also commensal gut bacteria. They may cause the dysbiosis of human intestinal microbiota and consequent metabolic alterations, as well as the spreading of antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs).In vitroexperiments by simulator of the human intestinal microbial ecosystem (SHIME) can clarify the direct effects of antibiotics on different regions of the human intestinal microbiota, allowing complex human microbiota to be stably maintained in the absence of host cells. However, there are very few articles added the antibiotics into thisin vitromodel to observe the effects of antibiotics on the human intestinal microbiota. To date, no studies have focused on the correlations between the bloomed pathogens caused by amoxicillin (AMX) exposure and increased functional pathway genes as well as ARGs. This study investigated the influence of 600 mg day(-1)AMX on human intestinal microbiota using SHIME. The impact of AMX on the composition and function of the human intestinal microbiota was revealed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and high-throughput quantitative PCR. The results suggested that: (i) AMX treatment has tremendous influence on the overall taxonomic composition of the gut microbiota by increasing the relative abundance ofKlebsiella[linear discriminant analysis (LDA) score = 5.26] andBacteroides uniformis(LDA score = 4.75), as well as taxonomic diversity (Simpson,P= 0.067,T-test; Shannon,P= 0.061,T-test), and decreasing the members ofParabacteroides(LDA score = 4.18),Bifidobacterium(LDA score = 4.06), andPhascolarctobacterium(LDA score = 3.95); (ii) AMX exposure significantly enhanced the functional pathway genes and beta-lactam resistance genes, and the bloomed pathogens were strongly correlated with the metabolic and immune system diseases gene numbers (R= 0.98,P< 0.001) orbl2_lenandbl2be_shv2abundance (R= 0.94,P< 0.001); (iii) the changes caused by AMX were SHIME-compartment different with more significant alteration in ascending colon, and the effects were permanent, which could not be restored after 2-week AMX discontinuance. Overall results demonstrated negative side-effects of AMX, which should be considered for AMX prescription.

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