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A data-based mathematical modelling study to quantify the effects of ciprofloxacin and ampicillin on the within-host dynamics of Salmonella enterica during treatment and relapse

Authors :
Vlazaki, Myrto
Rossi, Omar
Price, David J
McLean, Callum
Grant, Andrew J
Mastroeni, Pietro
Restif, Olivier
Grant, Andrew [0000-0001-9746-2989]
Mastroeni, Pietro [0000-0003-3838-4962]
Restif, Olivier [0000-0001-9158-853X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2020.

Abstract

Antibiotic therapy has drastically reduced the mortality and sequelae of bacterial infections. From naturally occurring to chemically synthesized, different classes of antibiotics have been successfully used without detailed knowledge of how they affect bacterial dynamics in vivo. However, a proportion of patients receiving antimicrobial therapy develop recrudescent infections post-treatment. Relapsing infections are attributable to incomplete clearance of bacterial populations following antibiotic administration; the metabolic profile of this antibiotic-recalcitrant bacterial subpopulation, the spatio-temporal context of its emergence and the variance of antibiotic-bacterial interactions in vivo remain unclear. Here, we develop and apply a mechanistic mathematical model to data from a study comparing the effects of ciprofloxacin and ampicillin on the within-host dynamics of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in murine infections. Using the inferential capacity of our model, we show that the antibiotic-recalcitrant bacteria following ampicillin, but not ciprofloxacin, treatment belong to a non-replicating phenotype. Aligning with previous studies, we independently estimate that the lymphoid tissues and spleen are important reservoirs of non-replicating bacteria. Finally, we predict that post-treatment, the progenitors of the non-growing and growing bacterial populations replicate and die at different rates. Ultimately, the liver, spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes are all repopulated by progenitors of the previously non-growing phenotype in ampicillin-treated mice.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....290815d3940e3f0b403ced7112a36a2e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.54045