DeVeaux Anna L, Hall-Moore Carla, Shaikh Nurmohammad, Wallace Meghan, Burnham Carey-Ann D, Schnadower David, Kuppermann Nathan, Mahajan Prashant, Ramilo Octavio, Tarr Phillip I, Dantas Gautam, Schwartz Drew J
The Edison Family Center for Genome Sciences and Systems Biology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Microbiome. 2025 Mar 24;13(1):82. doi: 10.1186/s40168-025-02079-w.
Extraintestinal bacterial infections (EBIs), e.g., urinary tract infection, bacteremia, and meningitis, occur in approximately 10% of febrile infants younger than 60 days. Although many EBI-causing species commonly reside in the infant gut, proof that the digestive system is a pre-infection habitat remains unestablished.
We studied a cohort of febrile term infants < 60 days old who presented to one of thirteen US emergency departments in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network from 2016 to 2019. Forty EBI cases and 74 febrile controls matched for age, sex, and race without documented EBIs were selected for analysis. Shotgun sequencing was performed of the gut microbiome and of strains cultured from the gut and extraintestinal site(s) of EBI cases, including blood, urine, and/or cerebrospinal fluid. Using a combination of EBI isolate genomics and fecal metagenomics, we detected an intestinal strain presumptively isogenic to the EBI pathogen (> 99.999% average nucleotide identity) in 63% of infants with EBIs. Although there was no difference in gut microbiome diversity between cases and controls, we observed significantly increased Escherichia coli relative abundance in the gut microbiome of infants with EBIs caused by E. coli. Infants with E. coli infections who were colonized by the putatively isogenic pathogen strain had significantly higher E. coli phylogroup B2 abundance in their gut, and their microbiome was more likely to contain virulence factor loci associated with adherence, exotoxin production, and nutritional/metabolic function.
The intestine plausibly serves as a reservoir for EBI pathogens in a subset of febrile term infants, prompting consideration of new opportunities for surveillance and EBI prevention among colonized, pre-symptomatic infants. Video Abstract.
肠外细菌感染(EBI),如尿路感染、菌血症和脑膜炎,发生在约10%的60日龄以下发热婴儿中。尽管许多引起EBI的菌种通常存在于婴儿肠道中,但消化系统是感染前栖息地的证据仍未确立。
我们研究了一组2016年至2019年在美国儿科急诊护理应用研究网络的13个急诊科之一就诊的60日龄以下发热足月儿队列。选择了40例EBI病例和74例年龄、性别和种族匹配且无EBI记录的发热对照进行分析。对肠道微生物组以及从EBI病例的肠道和肠外部位(包括血液、尿液和/或脑脊液)培养的菌株进行了鸟枪法测序。通过结合EBI分离株基因组学和粪便宏基因组学,我们在63%的EBI婴儿中检测到一种与EBI病原体假定同基因的肠道菌株(平均核苷酸同一性>99.999%)。尽管病例组和对照组的肠道微生物组多样性没有差异,但我们观察到由大肠杆菌引起的EBI婴儿的肠道微生物组中大肠杆菌的相对丰度显著增加。被假定同基因病原体菌株定植的大肠杆菌感染婴儿的肠道中大肠杆菌B2系统发育组的丰度显著更高,并且他们的微生物组更有可能包含与黏附、外毒素产生以及营养/代谢功能相关的毒力因子基因座。
在一部分发热足月儿中,肠道可能是EBI病原体的储存库,这促使我们考虑在定植的、无症状的婴儿中进行监测和预防EBI的新机会。视频摘要。