Antibiotic-Induced Changes to the Host Metabolic Environment Inhibit Drug Efficacy and Alter Immune Function

Bactericidal antibiotics alter microbial metabolism as part of their lethality and can damage mitochondria in mammalian cells. In addition, antibiotic susceptibility is sensitive to extracellular metabolites, but it remains unknown whether metabolites present at an infection site can affect either t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McCloskey, Douglas, Palsson, Bernhard O., Yang, Jason Hung-Ying, Saluja, Prerna Bhargava, Mao, Ning, Collins, James J.
Other Authors: Institute for Medical Engineering and Science
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier BV 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/120132
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0921-4657
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5560-8246
Description
Summary:Bactericidal antibiotics alter microbial metabolism as part of their lethality and can damage mitochondria in mammalian cells. In addition, antibiotic susceptibility is sensitive to extracellular metabolites, but it remains unknown whether metabolites present at an infection site can affect either treatment efficacy or immune function. Here, we quantify local metabolic changes in the host microenvironment following antibiotic treatment for a peritoneal Escherichia coli infection. Antibiotic treatment elicits microbiome-independent changes in local metabolites, but not those distal to the infection site, by acting directly on host cells. The metabolites induced during treatment, such as AMP, reduce antibiotic efficacy and enhance phagocytic killing. Moreover, antibiotic treatment impairs immune function by inhibiting respiratory activity in immune cells. Collectively, these results highlight the immunomodulatory potential of antibiotics and reveal the local metabolic microenvironment to be an important determinant of infection resolution. Antibiotic susceptibility is sensitive to metabolites, but how this affects in vivo treatment efficacy remains unexplored. Yang, Bhargava et al. characterize antibiotic-induced changes to the metabolic environment during infection and find that direct actions of antibiotics on host cells induce metabolites that impair drug efficacy and enhance phagocytic activity.