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Gut microbiome dysbiosis in antibiotic-treated COVID-19 patients is associated with microbial translocation and bacteremia
Lucie Bernard, Mericien Venzon, Jon Klein, Jordan E. Axelrad, Chenzhen Zhang, Alexis Sullivan, Grant Hussey, Arnau Casanovas‐Massana, María G. Noval, Ana M. Valero-Jimenez, Juan Gago, Gregory Putzel, Alejandro Pironti, Evan Wilder, Abeer Obaid
Nature Communications · 2022 · ▲ 191 citations
Abstract
Although microbial populations in the gut microbiome are associated with COVID-19 severity, a causal impact on patient health has not been established. Here we provide evidence that gut microbiome dysbiosis is associated with translocation of bacteria into the blood during COVID-19, causing life-threatening secondary infections. We first demonstrate SARS-CoV-2 infection induces gut microbiome dysbiosis in mice, which correlated with alterations to Paneth cells and goblet cells, and markers of barrier permeability. Samples collected from 96 COVID-19 patients at two different clinical sites also revealed substantial gut microbiome dysbiosis, including blooms of opportunistic pathogenic bacterial genera known to include antimicrobial-resistant species. Analysis of blood culture results testing for secondary microbial bloodstream infections with paired microbiome data indicates that bacteria may translocate from the gut into the systemic circulation of COVID-19 patients. These results are consistent with a direct role for gut microbiome dysbiosis in enabling dangerous secondary infections during COVID-19.
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- 10.1038/s41467-022-33395-6
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- 2026-06-13 MST
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APA
Bernard, L., Venzon, M., Klein, J., Axelrad, J.E., Zhang, C., Sullivan, A., Hussey, G., Casanovas‐Massana, A., Noval, M.G., Valero-Jimenez, A.M., Gago, J., Putzel, G., Pironti, A., Wilder, E., Obaid, A., Lu-Culligan, A., Nelson, A., Brito, A.F., Núñez, �., & Martin, A. (2022). Gut microbiome dysbiosis in antibiotic-treated COVID-19 patients is associated with microbial translocation and bacteremia. <em>Nature Communications</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33395-6
Vancouver
Bernard L, Venzon M, Klein J, Axelrad JE, Zhang C, Sullivan A, et al. Gut microbiome dysbiosis in antibiotic-treated COVID-19 patients is associated with microbial translocation and bacteremia. Nature Communications. 2022. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-33395-6.
BibTeX
@article{lucie2022Gutmic,
title = {Gut microbiome dysbiosis in antibiotic-treated COVID-19 patients is associated with microbial translocation and bacteremia},
author = {Lucie Bernard and Mericien Venzon and Jon Klein and Jordan E. Axelrad and Chenzhen Zhang and Alexis Sullivan and Grant Hussey and Arnau Casanovas‐Massana and María G. Noval and Ana M. Valero-Jimenez and Juan Gago and Gregory Putzel and Alejandro Pironti and Evan Wilder and Abeer Obaid and Alice Lu-Culligan and Allison Nelson and Anderson F. Brito and Ángela Núñez and Anjelica Martin and Annie Watkins and Bertie Geng and Chaney C. Kalinich and Christina A. Harden and Codruta Todeasa},
journal = {Nature Communications},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-33395-6},
}
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