Intestinal microbiota and antibiotic resistance: Perspectives and solutions

Q1 Medicine
Climent Casals-Pascual , Andrea Vergara , Jordi Vila
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引用次数: 56

Abstract

The intestinal commensal microbiota provides a myriad of benefits to the healthy host, including colonisation resistance against pathogens. Perturbations of the intestinal microbiota (dysbiosis) may adversely affect the health status of an individual and prevent protection against colonisation. The whole range of antibiotic resistance genes (resistome) in a specific microbiota is found in pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria. The administration of antibiotics may cause dysbiosis, contributing to the loss of colonisation resistance followed by an increment of the resistome in the intestinal microbiota. Treatments to control the current increase of multi drug-resistant (MDR) bacteria are extremely limited. In this context, the administration of healthy faecal microbiota to restore colonisation resistance and displace MDR bacteria emerges as a promising therapeutic alternative.

This brief review describes the role of the intestinal microbiota as a reservoir of MDR bacteria, the impact of different groups of antibiotics in the selection of MDR bacteria and crucially, the potential use of faecal microbiota transplantation using “healthy” or “MDR-free microbiota” to displace MDR bacteria and restore colonisation resistance.

肠道菌群和抗生素耐药性:观点和解决方案
肠道共生微生物群为健康的宿主提供了无数的好处,包括对病原体的定植抗性。肠道微生物群的扰动(生态失调)可能对个体的健康状况产生不利影响,并阻止对定植的保护。特定微生物群中的全部抗生素抗性基因(抗性组)存在于致病性和非致病性细菌中。抗生素的施用可能导致生态失调,导致肠道微生物群中定植抗性的丧失,随后是抗性组的增加。控制当前多重耐药(MDR)细菌增加的治疗非常有限。在这种情况下,健康的粪便微生物群的管理,以恢复定植耐药和取代耐多药细菌成为一个有前途的治疗方案。这篇简短的综述描述了肠道微生物群作为耐多药细菌储存库的作用,不同抗生素组对耐多药细菌选择的影响,以及至关重要的是,使用“健康”或“无耐多药微生物群”的粪便微生物群移植取代耐多药细菌并恢复定植抗性的潜在用途。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Human Microbiome Journal
Human Microbiome Journal Medicine-Infectious Diseases
自引率
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期刊介绍: The innumerable microbes living in and on our bodies are known to affect human wellbeing, but our knowledge of their role is still at the very early stages of understanding. Human Microbiome is a new open access journal dedicated to research on the impact of the microbiome on human health and disease. The journal will publish original research, reviews, comments, human microbe descriptions and genome, and letters. Topics covered will include: the repertoire of human-associated microbes, therapeutic intervention, pathophysiology, experimental models, physiological, geographical, and pathological changes, and technical reports; genomic, metabolomic, transcriptomic, and culturomic approaches are welcome.
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