Immunology Graduate Program, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
Medical Scientist Training Program, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA.
Sci Transl Med. 2022 Jun 15;14(649):eabl3981. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abl3981.
Although modern clinical practices such as cesarean sections and perinatal antibiotics have improved infant survival, treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics alters intestinal microbiota and causes dysbiosis. Infants exposed to perinatal antibiotics have an increased likelihood of life-threatening infections, including pneumonia. Here, we investigated how the gut microbiota sculpt pulmonary immune responses, promoting recovery and resolution of infection in newborn rhesus macaques. Early-life antibiotic exposure interrupted the maturation of intestinal commensal bacteria and disrupted the developmental trajectory of the pulmonary immune system, as assessed by single-cell proteomic and transcriptomic analyses. Early-life antibiotic exposure rendered newborn macaques more susceptible to bacterial pneumonia, concurrent with increases in neutrophil senescence and hyperinflammation, broad inflammatory cytokine signaling, and macrophage dysfunction. This pathogenic reprogramming of pulmonary immunity was further reflected by a hyperinflammatory signature in all pulmonary immune cell subsets coupled with a global loss of tissue-protective, homeostatic pathways in the lungs of dysbiotic newborns. Fecal microbiota transfer was associated with partial correction of the broad immune maladaptations and protection against severe pneumonia. These data demonstrate the importance of intestinal microbiota in programming pulmonary immunity and support the idea that gut microbiota promote the balance between pathways driving tissue repair and inflammatory responses associated with clinical recovery from infection in infants. Our results highlight a potential role for microbial transfer for immune support in these at-risk infants.
尽管现代临床实践如剖宫产术和围产期抗生素的使用提高了婴儿的存活率,但广谱抗生素的治疗会改变肠道微生物群并导致失调。暴露于围产期抗生素的婴儿更有可能发生危及生命的感染,包括肺炎。在这里,我们研究了肠道微生物群如何塑造肺部免疫反应,促进新生恒河猴感染的恢复和解决。婴儿期抗生素暴露中断了肠道共生细菌的成熟,并通过单细胞蛋白质组学和转录组学分析破坏了肺部免疫系统的发育轨迹。婴儿期抗生素暴露使新生猕猴更容易发生细菌性肺炎,同时伴随着中性粒细胞衰老和过度炎症、广泛的炎症细胞因子信号和巨噬细胞功能障碍的增加。这种肺部免疫的致病性重编程进一步反映在所有肺部免疫细胞亚群的过度炎症特征上,同时伴随着肠道失调新生肺组织中保护性、稳态途径的全面丧失。粪便微生物群转移与广泛免疫适应不良的部分纠正以及对严重肺炎的保护有关。这些数据表明肠道微生物群在编程肺部免疫中的重要性,并支持肠道微生物群促进与从感染中临床恢复相关的驱动组织修复和炎症反应的途径之间平衡的观点。我们的结果强调了微生物转移在这些高危婴儿的免疫支持中的潜在作用。