Center for Microbial Pathogenesis, Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
mSphere. 2020 Apr 15;5(2):e00296-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00296-20.
The use of broad-spectrum antibiotics to treat diseases, such as the highly prevalent pediatric disease otitis media (OM), contributes significantly to the worldwide emergence of multiple-antibiotic-resistant microbes, and gut dysbiosis with diarrhea is a common adverse sequela. Moreover, for many diseases, like OM, biofilms contribute significantly to chronicity and recurrence, yet biofilm-resident bacteria are characteristically highly resistant to antibiotics. The most cost-effective way to both prevent and resolve diseases like OM, as well as begin to address the problem of growing antibiotic resistance, would be via the development of novel approaches to eradicate bacterial biofilms. Toward this goal, we designed a vaccine antigen that induces the formation of antibodies that prevent biofilm formation and, thereby, experimental OM in the middle ears of chinchillas by the predominant Gram-negative pathogen responsible for this disease, nontypeable These antibodies also significantly disrupt preexisting biofilms formed by diverse pathogens. Whereas preclinical data strongly support the continued development of this vaccine antigen, which targets an essential structural element of bacterial biofilms, a concern has been whether active immunization would also lead to unintended collateral damage in the form of an altered gut microbiome. To address this concern, we assessed changes in the microbiome of the chinchilla gut over time after the delivery of either amoxicillin-clavulanate, the standard of care for OM, or after immunization with our biofilm-targeted vaccine antigen either via a traditional subcutaneous route or via a novel noninvasive transcutaneous route. We show that differences in the abundance of specific taxa were found only in the stools of antibiotic-treated animals. The prevalence of chronic and recurrent diseases, combined with the overuse/abuse of antibiotics that has led to the sobering emergence of bacteria resistant to multiple antibiotics, has mandated that we develop novel approaches to better manage these diseases or, ideally, prevent them. Biofilms play a key role in the pathogenesis of chronic and recurrent bacterial diseases but are difficult, if not impossible, to eradicate with antibiotics. We developed a vaccine antigen designed to mediate biofilm disruption; however, it is also important that delivery of this vaccine does not induce collateral damage to the microbiome. The studies described here validated a vaccine approach that targets biofilms without the consequences of an altered gut microbiome. While delivery of the antibiotic most commonly given to children with ear infections did indeed alter the gut microbiome, as expected, immunization via traditional injection or by noninvasive delivery to the skin did not result in changes to the chinchilla gut microbiome.
广谱抗生素的使用,例如治疗小儿常见疾病中耳炎(otitis media,OM),极大地促进了全球多种抗生素耐药微生物的出现,而腹泻导致的肠道菌群失调是常见的不良后遗症。此外,对于许多疾病,如 OM,生物膜在慢性和复发中起着重要作用,但生物膜内的细菌对抗生素具有很强的耐药性。预防和解决 OM 等疾病并开始解决抗生素耐药性日益严重的问题的最具成本效益的方法是开发新型方法来根除细菌生物膜。为此,我们设计了一种疫苗抗原,该抗原诱导形成的抗体可预防生物膜的形成,从而预防由主要的革兰氏阴性病原体引起的中耳实验性 OM,这些病原体是非分型的。这些抗体还显著破坏了由多种病原体形成的预先存在的生物膜。虽然临床前数据强烈支持继续开发这种疫苗抗原,该抗原针对细菌生物膜的一个必需结构元素,但人们担心主动免疫是否也会导致肠道微生物组的意外改变。为了解决这个问题,我们评估了在给予阿莫西林-克拉维酸(OM 的标准治疗方法)后,或通过传统的皮下途径或通过新型非侵入性经皮途径免疫接种我们的生物膜靶向疫苗抗原后,南美栗鼠肠道微生物组随时间的变化。我们发现,只有在接受抗生素治疗的动物的粪便中才发现特定分类群丰度的差异。慢性和复发性疾病的流行,加上抗生素的过度使用/滥用,导致了对多种抗生素具有耐药性的细菌的出现,这使得我们必须开发新的方法来更好地治疗这些疾病,或者理想情况下预防这些疾病。生物膜在慢性和复发性细菌疾病的发病机制中起着关键作用,但用抗生素很难(如果不是不可能)根除。我们开发了一种设计用于介导生物膜破坏的疫苗抗原;然而,同样重要的是,这种疫苗的递送不会对微生物组造成附带损害。这里描述的研究验证了一种针对生物膜的疫苗方法,而不会对肠道微生物组产生影响。虽然给予儿童最常用的抗生素确实改变了肠道微生物组,但正如预期的那样,通过传统注射或非侵入性皮肤给药免疫接种不会导致南美栗鼠肠道微生物组发生变化。