Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Michael Smith Laboratories, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Biomedical Research Center, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2015 Jan;135(1):100-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2014.06.027. Epub 2014 Aug 18.
Resident gut microbiota are now recognized as potent modifiers of host immune responses in various scenarios. Recently, we demonstrated that perinatal exposure to vancomycin, but not streptomycin, profoundly alters gut microbiota and enhances susceptibility to a TH2 model of allergic asthma.
Here we sought to further clarify the etiology of these changes by determining whether perinatal antibiotic treatment has a similar effect on the TH1/TH17-mediated lung disease, hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis was induced in C57BL/6 wild-type or recombination-activating gene 1-deficient mice treated perinatally with vancomycin or streptomycin by repeated intranasal administration of Saccharopolyspora rectivirgula antigen. Disease severity was assessed by measuring lung inflammation, pathology, cytokine responses, and serum antibodies. Microbial community analyses were performed on stool samples via 16S ribosomal RNA pyrosequencing and correlations between disease severity and specific bacterial taxa were identified.
Surprisingly, in contrast to our findings in an allergic asthma model, we found that the severity of hypersensitivity pneumonitis was unaffected by vancomycin, but increased dramatically after streptomycin treatment. This likely reflects an effect on the adaptive, rather than innate, immune response because the effects of streptomycin were not observed during the early phases of disease and were abrogated in recombination-activating gene 1-deficient mice. Interestingly, Bacteroidetes dominated the intestinal microbiota of streptomycin-treated animals, while vancomycin promoted the expansion of the Firmicutes.
Perinatal antibiotics exert highly selective effects on resident gut flora, which, in turn, lead to very specific alterations in susceptibility to TH2- or TH1/TH17-driven lung inflammatory disease.
目前人们认为,居住在肠道内的微生物能够调节宿主在各种情况下的免疫反应。最近,我们发现,围产期接触万古霉素而非链霉素会显著改变肠道微生物群,并增强对 2 型过敏性哮喘的易感性。
本研究旨在通过确定围产期抗生素治疗是否对 1 型辅助性 T 细胞(TH1)/辅助性 T 细胞 17(TH17)介导的肺部疾病——过敏性肺炎有类似影响,进一步阐明这些变化的病因。
通过重复给予链霉菌属发酵产物抗原,诱导 C57BL/6 野生型或重组激活基因 1 缺陷型小鼠发生过敏性肺炎,构建围产期经万古霉素或链霉素处理的动物模型。通过测量肺部炎症、病理、细胞因子反应和血清抗体来评估疾病严重程度。采用 16S 核糖体 RNA 焦磷酸测序技术对粪便样本进行微生物群落分析,并确定疾病严重程度与特定细菌分类群之间的相关性。
出乎意料的是,与我们在过敏性哮喘模型中发现的结果相反,我们发现,与万古霉素相比,链霉素治疗并未增加过敏性肺炎的严重程度,反而显著增加。这可能反映了对适应性免疫而非固有免疫反应的影响,因为在疾病的早期阶段并未观察到链霉素的作用,而且在重组激活基因 1 缺陷型小鼠中也未观察到该作用。有趣的是,厚壁菌门在链霉素处理动物的肠道微生物群中占主导地位,而万古霉素促进了Firmicutes 的扩张。
围产期抗生素对居住在肠道内的微生物群具有高度选择性的影响,进而导致对 2 型辅助性 T 细胞或 TH1/TH17 驱动的肺部炎症性疾病易感性的特异性改变。