4.7 Article

High-sugar, high-fat, and high-protein diets promote antibiotic resistance gene spreading in the mouse intestinal microbiota

期刊

GUT MICROBES
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2021.2022442

关键词

Diet; antibiotic resistance gene; inflammatory microenvironment; amplification and transfer; pathogenic bacteria

资金

  1. key projects of National Natural Science Foundation of China [41831287]
  2. Tianjin Municipal Natural Science Foundation [19JCZDJC39900]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Diet can remodel the intestinal microbiota and affect the spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). High-sugar, high-fat, and high-protein diets promote the amplification and transfer of ARGs among intestinal microbiota, and alter the composition and diversity of the microbiota. Inflammation-related products are correlated with the spread of ARGs, suggesting that the post-diet remodeling microenvironment is conducive to ARGs spreading.
Diet can not only provide nutrition for intestinal microbiota, it can also remodel them. However, is unclear whether and how diet affects the spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the intestinal microbiota. Therefore, we employed selected high-sugar, high-fat, high-protein, and normal diets to explore the effect. The results showed that high-sugar, high-fat, and high-protein diets promoted the amplification and transfer of exogenous ARGs among intestinal microbiota, and up-regulated the expression of trfAp and trbBp while significantly altered the intestinal microbiota and its metabolites. Inflammation-related products were strongly correlated with the spread of ARGs, suggesting the intestinal microenvironment after diet remodeling might be conducive to the spreading of ARGs. This may be attributed to changes in bacterial membrane permeability, the SOS response, and bacterial composition and diversity caused by diet-induced inflammation. In addition, acceptor bacteria (zygotes) screened by flow cytometry were mostly Proteobacteria, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria, and most were derived from dominant intestinal bacteria remodeled by diet, indicating that the transfer of ARGs was closely linked to diet, and had some selectivity. Metagenomic results showed that the gut resistance genome could be affected not only by diet, but by exogenous antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB). Many ARG markers coincided with bacterial markers in diet groups. Therefore, dominant bacteria in different diets are important hosts of ARGs in specific dietary environments, but the many pathogenic bacteria present may cause serious harm to human health.

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