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Citrobacter amalonaticus Inhibits the Growth of Citrobacter rodentium in the Gut Lumen
Author(s) -
Caroline Mullineaux-Sanders,
Danielle Carson,
Eve G. D. Hopkins,
Izabela Glegola-Madejska,
Alejandra EscobarZepeda,
Hilary P. Browne,
Trevor D. Lawley,
Gad Frankel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mbio
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.562
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 2161-2129
pISSN - 2150-7511
DOI - 10.1128/mbio.02410-21
Subject(s) - citrobacter rodentium , microbiology and biotechnology , cecum , biology , pathogen , citrobacter , colonisation resistance , antibiotics , enterobacteriaceae , escherichia coli , ecology , biochemistry , gene
The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in susceptibility to enteric pathogens, including Citrobacter rodentium , a model extracellular mouse pathogen that colonizes the colonic mucosa. C. rodentium infection outcomes vary between mouse strains, with C57BL/6 and C3H/HeN mice clearing and succumbing to the infection, respectively. Kanamycin (Kan) treatment at the peak of C57BL/6 mouse infection with Kan-resistant C. rodentium resulted in relocalization of the pathogen from the colonic mucosa and cecum to solely the cecal luminal contents; cessation of the Kan treatment resulted in rapid clearance of the pathogen. We now show that in C3H/HeN mice, following Kan-induced displacement of C. rodentium to the cecum, the pathogen stably colonizes the cecal lumens of 65% of the mice in the absence of continued antibiotic treatment, a phenomenon that we term antibiotic-induced bacterial commensalization (AIBC). AIBC C. rodentium was well tolerated by the host, which showed few signs of inflammation; passaged AIBC C. rodentium robustly infected naive C3H/HeN mice, suggesting that the AIBC state is transient and did not select for genetically avirulent C. rodentium mutants. Following withdrawal of antibiotic treatment, 35% of C3H/HeN mice were able to prevent C. rodentium commensalization in the gut lumen. These mice presented a bloom of a commensal species, Citrobacter amalonaticus , which inhibited the growth of C. rodentium in vitro in a contact-dependent manner and the luminal growth of AIBC C. rodentium in vivo . Overall, our data suggest that commensal species can confer colonization resistance to closely related pathogenic species.

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