4.7 Article

Citrobacter amalonaticus Inhibits the Growth of Citrobacter rodentium in the Gut Lumen

期刊

MBIO
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02410-21

关键词

Citrobacter; gastrointestinal infection; colonization resistance

资金

  1. Royal Society
  2. MRC
  3. Wellcome Trust Ph.D. studentship
  4. MRC Ph.D. studentship
  5. Wellcome Trust [098051]
  6. ESPOD fellowship
  7. MRC [MR/R020671/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in combating enteric pathogens, and the phenomenon of antibiotic-induced bacterial commensalization suggests that commensal species can provide colonization resistance. This highlights the significance of studying and utilizing commensal bacteria in researching and preventing intestinal infections.
The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in susceptibility to enteric pathogens, including Citrobacter rodentium, a model extracellular mouse pathogen that colonizes the colonic mucosa. C. rodentium infection outcomes vary between mouse strains, with C57BL/6 and C3H/HeN mice clearing and succumbing to the infection, respectively. Kanamycin (Kan) treatment at the peak of C57BL/6 mouse infection with Kan -resistant C. rodentium resulted in relocalization of the pathogen from the colonic mucosa and cecum to solely the cecal luminal contents; cessation of the Kan treatment resulted in rapid clearance of the pathogen. We now show that in C3H/HeN mice, following Kan-induced displacement of C. rodentium to the cecum, the pathogen stably colonizes the cecal lumens of 65% of the mice in the absence of continued antibiotic treatment, a phenomenon that we term antibiotic-induced bacterial commensalization (AIBC). AIBC C. rodentium was well tolerated by the host, which showed few signs of inflam-mation; passaged AIBC C. rodentium robustly infected naive C3H/HeN mice, suggesting that the AIBC state is transient and did not select for genetically avirulent C. rodentium mutants. Following withdrawal of antibiotic treatment, 35% of C3H/HeN mice were able to prevent C. rodentium commensalization in the gut lumen. These mice presented a bloom of a commensal species, Citrobacter amalonaticus, which inhibited the growth of C. rodentium in vitro in a contact-dependent manner and the luminal growth of AIBC C. rodentium in vivo. Overall, our data suggest that commensal species can confer colonization resistance to closely related pathogenic species. IMPORTANCE Gut bacterial infections involve three-way interactions between virulence factors, the host immune responses, and the microbiome. While the microbiome erects colonization resistance barriers, pathogens employ virulence factors to overcome them. Treating mice infected with kanamycin-resistant Citrobacter rodentium with kanamycin caused displacement of the pathogen from the colonic mucosa to the cecal lumen. Following withdrawal of the kanamycin treatment, 65% of the mice were persistently colonized by C. rodentium, which seemed to downregulate virulence factor expression. In this model of luminal gut colonization, 35% of mice were refractory to stable C. rodentium colonization, suggesting that their microbiotas were able to confer colonization resistance. We identify a commensal bacterium of the Citrobacter genus, C. amalonaticus, which inhibits C. rodentium growth in vitro and in vivo. These results show that the line separating commensal and pathogenic lifestyles is thin and multi factorial and that commensals may play a major role in combating enteric infection.

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