4.5 Review

Effect of Probiotics on Host-Microbiota in Bacterial Infections

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11090986

Keywords

pathogenic bacteria; infection; probiotics; bacterial persistence; antibiotic resistance; microbiota; persisters

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Funding

  1. Regional Ministry of Health and Families (Andalucia, Spain) [RPS 24665]

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Diseases caused by bacteria and antibiotic resistance are important global issues. Persistence of bacteria is a survival strategy, and probiotics can regulate gut microbiota, inhibit pathogen growth, and replace pathogenic bacteria.
Diseases caused by bacteria cause millions of deaths every year. In addition, the problem of resistance to antibiotics is so serious that it threatens the achievements of modern medicine. This is a very important global problem as some bacteria can also develop persistence. Indeed, the persistence of pathogenic bacteria has evolved as a potent survival strategy to overcome host organisms' defense mechanisms. Additionally, chronic or persistent infections may be caused by persisters which could facilitate antibiotic resistance. Probiotics are considered good bacteria. It has been described that the modulation of gut microbiota by probiotics could have a great potential to counteract the deleterious impact and/or regulate gut microbiota after bacterial infection. Probiotics might provide health benefits through the inhibition of pathogen growth or the replacement of pathogenic bacteria. Bearing in mind that current strategies to avoid bacterial persistence and prevent antibiotic resistance are not effective, other strategies need to be assessed. We have carried out a comprehensive review, which included the reported literature between 2016 and 2021, highlighting the clinical trials that reported the probiotics' potential to regulate gut microbiota after bacterial infection and focusing in particular on the context of antibiotic resistance and persister cells.

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