Microbiome and Host Health Program, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Infection and Immunity, Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia.
Microbiol Spectr. 2023 Aug 17;11(4):e0083123. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.00831-23. Epub 2023 Jun 22.
Long-term low-dose macrolide therapy is now widely used in the treatment of chronic respiratory diseases for its immune-modulating effects, although the antimicrobial properties of macrolides can also have collateral impacts on the gut microbiome. We investigated whether such treatment altered intestinal commensal microbiology and whether any such changes affected systemic immune and metabolic regulation. In healthy adults exposed to 4 weeks of low-dose erythromycin or azithromycin, as used clinically, we observed consistent shifts in gut microbiome composition, with a reduction in microbial capacity related to carbohydrate metabolism and short-chain fatty acid biosynthesis. These changes were accompanied by alterations in systemic biomarkers relating to immune (interleukin 5 [IL-5], IL-10, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 [MCP-1]) and metabolic (serotonin [5-HT], C-peptide) homeostasis. Transplantation of erythromycin-exposed murine microbiota into germ-free mice demonstrated that changes in metabolic homeostasis and gastrointestinal motility, but not systemic immune regulation, resulted from changes in intestinal microbiology caused by macrolide treatment. Our findings highlight the potential for long-term low-dose macrolide therapy to influence host physiology via alteration of the gut microbiome. Long-term macrolide therapy is widely used in chronic respiratory diseases although its antibacterial activity can also affect the gut microbiota, a key regulator of host physiology. Macrolide-associated studies on the gut microbiota have been limited to short antibiotic courses and have not examined its consequences for host immune and metabolic regulation. This study revealed that long-term macrolides depleted keystone bacteria and impacted host regulation, mediated directly by macrolide activity or indirectly by alterations to the gut microbiota. Understanding these macrolide-associated mechanisms will contribute to identifying the risk of long-term exposure and highlights the importance of targeted therapy for maintenance of the gut microbiota.
长期低剂量大环内酯类药物治疗因其免疫调节作用而被广泛用于治疗慢性呼吸系统疾病,尽管大环内酯类药物的抗菌特性也会对肠道微生物群产生附带影响。我们研究了这种治疗是否会改变肠道共生微生物群,以及任何此类变化是否会影响全身免疫和代谢调节。在健康成年人中,暴露于临床使用的 4 周低剂量红霉素或阿奇霉素会导致肠道微生物群组成发生一致变化,与碳水化合物代谢和短链脂肪酸生物合成相关的微生物能力降低。这些变化伴随着与免疫(白细胞介素 5 [IL-5]、白细胞介素 10、单核细胞趋化蛋白 1 [MCP-1])和代谢(血清素 [5-HT]、C 肽)稳态相关的全身生物标志物的改变。将暴露于红霉素的肠道微生物群移植到无菌小鼠中表明,代谢稳态和胃肠道蠕动的变化,而不是全身免疫调节,是由大环内酯类药物治疗引起的肠道微生物群变化引起的。我们的研究结果强调了长期低剂量大环内酯类药物治疗通过改变肠道微生物群影响宿主生理学的潜力。长期大环内酯类药物治疗广泛用于慢性呼吸系统疾病,尽管其抗菌活性也会影响肠道微生物群,而肠道微生物群是宿主生理学的关键调节剂。关于肠道微生物群的大环内酯类药物相关研究仅限于短期抗生素疗程,并未检查其对宿主免疫和代谢调节的后果。本研究表明,长期大环内酯类药物会耗尽关键细菌并影响宿主调节,这直接由大环内酯类药物的活性介导,或间接由肠道微生物群的改变介导。了解这些与大环内酯类药物相关的机制将有助于确定长期暴露的风险,并强调靶向治疗维持肠道微生物群的重要性。