USDA-ARS Western Human Nutrition Research Center, Davis, California, USA.
Department of Food Science & Technology, University of California, Davisgrid.27860.3b, California, USA.
mBio. 2022 Jun 28;13(3):e0010122. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00101-22. Epub 2022 May 10.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) represents a significant source of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with expectations that AMR-associated consequences will continue to worsen throughout the coming decades. Since resistance to antibiotics is encoded in the microbiome, interventions aimed at altering the taxonomic composition of the gut might allow us to prophylactically engineer microbiomes that harbor fewer antibiotic resistant genes (ARGs). Diet is one method of intervention, and yet little is known about the association between diet and antimicrobial resistance. To address this knowledge gap, we examined diet using the food frequency questionnaire (FFQ; habitual diet) and 24-h dietary recalls (Automated Self-Administered 24-h [ASA24] tool) coupled with an analysis of the microbiome using shotgun metagenome sequencing in 290 healthy adult participants of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Nutritional Phenotyping Study. We found that aminoglycosides were the most abundant and prevalent mechanism of AMR in these healthy adults and that aminoglycoside--phosphotransferases () correlated negatively with total calories and soluble fiber intake. Individuals in the lowest quartile of ARGs (low-ARG) consumed significantly more fiber in their diets than medium- and high-ARG individuals, which was concomitant with increased abundances of obligate anaerobes, especially from the family , in their gut microbiota. Finally, we applied machine learning to examine 387 dietary, physiological, and lifestyle features for associations with antimicrobial resistance, finding that increased phylogenetic diversity of diet was associated with low-ARG individuals. These data suggest diet may be a potential method for reducing the burden of AMR. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) represents a considerable burden to health care systems, with the public health community largely in consensus that AMR will be a major cause of death worldwide in the coming decades. Humans carry antibiotic resistance in the microbes that live in and on us, collectively known as the human microbiome. Diet is a powerful method for shaping the human gut microbiome and may be a tractable method for lessening antibiotic resistance, and yet little is known about the relationship between diet and AMR. We examined this relationship in healthy individuals who contained various abundances of antibiotic resistance genes and found that individuals who consumed diverse diets that were high in fiber and low in animal protein had fewer antibiotic resistance genes. Dietary interventions may be useful for lessening the burden of antimicrobial resistance and might ultimately motivate dietary guidelines which will consider how nutrition can reduce the impact of infectious disease.
抗生素耐药性(AMR)是全球发病率和死亡率的重要来源,预计在未来几十年,与 AMR 相关的后果将继续恶化。由于抗生素耐药性是由微生物组编码的,因此干预旨在改变肠道的分类组成的方法可能使我们能够预防性地设计出含有较少抗生素耐药基因(ARGs)的微生物组。饮食是一种干预方法,但人们对饮食与抗生素耐药性之间的关系知之甚少。为了填补这一知识空白,我们使用食物频率问卷(FFQ;习惯性饮食)和 24 小时膳食回忆(自动自我管理 24 小时 [ASA24] 工具),结合对美国农业部(USDA)营养表型研究中 290 名健康成年人的微生物组进行的 shotgun 宏基因组测序,来研究饮食。我们发现,氨基糖苷类是这些健康成年人中 AMR 最丰富和最常见的机制,并且氨基糖苷类-磷酸转移酶()与总卡路里和可溶性纤维摄入呈负相关。ARG 最低四分位数(低-ARG)个体的饮食中纤维摄入量明显高于中-ARG 和高-ARG 个体,这与肠道微生物群中专性厌氧菌(尤其是家族)的丰度增加有关。最后,我们应用机器学习来检查与抗生素耐药性相关的 387 种饮食、生理和生活方式特征,发现饮食的系统发育多样性增加与低-ARG 个体有关。这些数据表明,饮食可能是减轻 AMR 负担的一种潜在方法。
抗生素耐药性(AMR)对医疗保健系统构成了相当大的负担,公共卫生界普遍认为,在未来几十年,AMR 将成为全球主要的死亡原因。人类携带的抗生素耐药性存在于生活在我们体内和体表的微生物中,统称为人类微生物组。饮食是塑造人类肠道微生物组的有力方法,可能是减轻抗生素耐药性的一种可行方法,但人们对饮食与 AMR 之间的关系知之甚少。我们在含有不同数量抗生素耐药基因的健康个体中研究了这种关系,发现饮食多样化、富含纤维、低动物蛋白的个体的抗生素耐药基因较少。饮食干预可能有助于减轻抗生素耐药性的负担,并最终促使营养指南考虑营养如何减少传染病的影响。