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The initial state of the human gut microbiome determines its reshaping by antibiotics
Frédéric Raymond, Amin Ahmed Ouameur, Maxime Déraspe, Naeem Iqbal, Hélène Gingras, Bédis Dridi, Philippe Leprohon, Pier-Luc Plante, R. Giroux, Ève Bérubé, Johanne Frenette, Dominique K. Boudreau, Jean-Luc Simard, Isabelle Chabot, Marc-Christian Domingo
The ISME Journal · 2015 · ▲ 365 citations
Abstract
Microbiome studies have demonstrated the high inter-individual diversity of the gut microbiota. However, how the initial composition of the microbiome affects the impact of antibiotics on microbial communities is relatively unexplored. To specifically address this question, we administered a second-generation cephalosporin, cefprozil, to healthy volunteers. Stool samples gathered before antibiotic exposure, at the end of the treatment and 3 months later were analysed using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. On average, 15 billion nucleotides were sequenced for each sample. We show that standard antibiotic treatment can alter the gut microbiome in a specific, reproducible and predictable manner. The most consistent effect of the antibiotic was the increase of Lachnoclostridium bolteae in 16 out of the 18 cefprozil-exposed participants. Strikingly, we identified a subgroup of participants who were enriched in the opportunistic pathogen Enterobacter cloacae after exposure to the antibiotic, an effect linked to lower initial microbiome diversity and to a Bacteroides enterotype. Although the resistance gene content of participants' microbiomes was altered by the antibiotic, the impact of cefprozil remained specific to individual participants. Resistance genes that were not detectable prior to treatment were observed after a 7-day course of antibiotic administration. Specifically, point mutations in beta-lactamase blaCfxA-6 were enriched after antibiotic treatment in several participants. This suggests that monitoring the initial composition of the microbiome before treatment could assist in the prevention of some of the adverse effects associated with antibiotics or other treatments.
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- 10.1038/ismej.2015.148
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- 2026-06-13 MST
Cite this
APA
Raymond, F., Ouameur, A.A., Déraspe, M., Iqbal, N., Gingras, H., Dridi, B., Leprohon, P., Plante, P., Giroux, R., Bérubé, �., Frenette, J., Boudreau, D.K., Simard, J., Chabot, I., Domingo, M., Trottier, S., Boissinot, M., Huletsky, A., Roy, P.H., & Ouellette, M. (2015). The initial state of the human gut microbiome determines its reshaping by antibiotics. <em>The ISME Journal</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2015.148
Vancouver
Raymond F, Ouameur AA, Déraspe M, Iqbal N, Gingras H, Dridi B, et al. The initial state of the human gut microbiome determines its reshaping by antibiotics. The ISME Journal. 2015. doi:10.1038/ismej.2015.148.
BibTeX
@article{frdric2015Theini,
title = {The initial state of the human gut microbiome determines its reshaping by antibiotics},
author = {Frédéric Raymond and Amin Ahmed Ouameur and Maxime Déraspe and Naeem Iqbal and Hélène Gingras and Bédis Dridi and Philippe Leprohon and Pier-Luc Plante and R. Giroux and Ève Bérubé and Johanne Frenette and Dominique K. Boudreau and Jean-Luc Simard and Isabelle Chabot and Marc-Christian Domingo and Sylvie Trottier and Maurice Boissinot and Ann Huletsky and Paul H. Roy and Marc Ouellette and Michel G. Bergeron and Jacques Corbeil},
journal = {The ISME Journal},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.1038/ismej.2015.148},
}
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