Back to Search Start Over

Unravelling the collateral damage of antibiotics on gut bacteria

Authors :
Lisa A. Maier
Michael B. Zimmermann
Ulrike Löber
Tisya Banerjee
Bärbel Stecher
Camille V. Goemans
Patrick Müller
Elisabetta Cacace
Sofia K. Forslund
Jakob Wirbel
Boyao Zhang
Cordula Gekeler
Exene Erin Anderson
Peer Bork
Michael Kuhn
Athanasios Typas
Mihaela Pruteanu
Claudia Eberl
Sarela García-Santamarina
Kiran Raosaheb Patil
Georg Zeller
Alessio Milanese
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Antibiotics are used to fight pathogens but also target commensal bacteria, disturbing the composition of gut microbiota and causing dysbiosis and disease1. Despite this well-known collateral damage, the activity spectrum of different antibiotic classes on gut bacteria remains poorly characterized. Here we characterize further 144 antibiotics from a previous screen of more than 1,000 drugs on 38 representative human gut microbiome species2. Antibiotic classes exhibited distinct inhibition spectra, including generation dependence for quinolones and phylogeny independence for β-lactams. Macrolides and tetracyclines, both prototypic bacteriostatic protein synthesis inhibitors, inhibited nearly all commensals tested but also killed several species. Killed bacteria were more readily eliminated from in vitro communities than those inhibited. This species-specific killing activity challenges the long-standing distinction between bactericidal and bacteriostatic antibiotic classes and provides a possible explanation for the strong effect of macrolides on animal3–5 and human6,7 gut microbiomes. To mitigate this collateral damage of macrolides and tetracyclines, we screened for drugs that specifically antagonized the antibiotic activity against abundant Bacteroides species but not against relevant pathogens. Such antidotes selectively protected Bacteroides species from erythromycin treatment in human-stool-derived communities and gnotobiotic mice. These findings illluminate the activity spectra of antibiotics in commensal bacteria and suggest strategies to circumvent their adverse effects on the gut microbiota. This study systematically profiles the activity of several classes of antibiotics on gut commensal bacteria and identifies drugs that mitigate their collateral damage on commensal bacteria without compromising their efficacy against pathogens.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
599
Issue :
7883
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a42dfeac09d0db60ee287642992f4a4a