Development of early life gut resistome and mobilome across gestational ages and microbiota-modifying treatments
Journal article, 2023

Background: Gestational age (GA) and associated level of gastrointestinal tract maturation are major factors driving the initial gut microbiota composition in preterm infants. Besides, compared to term infants, premature infants often receive antibiotics to treat infections and probiotics to restore optimal gut microbiota. How GA, antibiotics, and probiotics modulate the microbiota's core characteristics, gut resistome and mobilome, remains nascent. Methods: We analysed metagenomic data from a longitudinal observational study in six Norwegian neonatal intensive care units to describe the bacterial microbiota of infants of varying GA and receiving different treatments. The cohort consisted of probiotic-supplemented and antibiotic-exposed extremely preterm infants (n = 29), antibiotic-exposed very preterm (n = 25), antibiotic-unexposed very preterm (n = 8), and antibiotic-unexposed full-term (n = 10) infants. The stool samples were collected on days of life 7, 28, 120, and 365, and DNA extraction was followed by shotgun metagenome sequencing and bioinformatical analysis. Findings: The top predictors of microbiota maturation were hospitalisation length and GA. Probiotic administration rendered the gut microbiota and resistome of extremely preterm infants more alike to term infants on day 7 and ameliorated GA-driven loss of microbiota interconnectivity and stability. GA, hospitalisation, and both microbiota-modifying treatments (antibiotics and probiotics) contributed to an elevated carriage of mobile genetic elements in preterm infants compared to term controls. Finally, Escherichia coli was associated with the highest number of antibiotic-resistance genes, followed by Klebsiella pneumoniae and Klebsiella aerogenes. Interpretation: Prolonged hospitalisation, antibiotics, and probiotic intervention contribute to dynamic alterations in resistome and mobilome, gut microbiota characteristics relevant to infection risk. Funding: Odd-Berg Group, Northern Norway Regional Health Authority.

Extremely preterm infants

Gut microbiota

Gestational age

Probiotics

Resistome

Mobilome

Author

Ahmed Bargheet

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

Claus Klingenberg

University Hospital of North Norway

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

Eirin Esaiassen

University Hospital of North Norway

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

Erik Hjerde

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

Jorunn Pauline Cavanagh

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

Johan Bengtsson-Palme

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Veronika Kuchařová Pettersen

University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway

EBioMedicine

2352-3964 (eISSN)

Vol. 92 104613

Predicting future pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) (FFL21-0174), 2022-08-01 -- 2027-12-31.

Subject Categories

Pediatrics

DOI

10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104613

PubMed

37187112

More information

Latest update

5/26/2023