The Intestinal Microbiota: Impacts of Antibiotics Therapy, Colonization Resistance, and Diseases.
Taif ShahZulqarnain BalochZahir ShahXiuming CuiXueshan XiaPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Trillions of microbes exist in the human body, particularly the gastrointestinal tract, coevolved with the host in a mutually beneficial relationship. The main role of the intestinal microbiome is the fermentation of non-digestible substrates and increased growth of beneficial microbes that produce key antimicrobial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids, etc., to inhibit the growth of pathogenic microbes besides other functions. Intestinal microbiota can prevent pathogen colonization through the mechanism of colonization resistance. A wide range of resistomes are present in both beneficial and pathogenic microbes. Giving antibiotic exposure to the intestinal microbiome (both beneficial and hostile) can trigger a resistome response, affecting colonization resistance. The following review provides a mechanistic overview of the intestinal microbiome and the impacts of antibiotic therapy on pathogen colonization and diseases. Further, we also discuss the epidemiology of immunocompromised patients who are at high risk for nosocomial infections, colonization and decolonization of multi-drug resistant organisms in the intestine, and the direct and indirect mechanisms that govern colonization resistance to the pathogens.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- end stage renal disease
- multidrug resistant
- acinetobacter baumannii
- chronic kidney disease
- endothelial cells
- staphylococcus aureus
- peritoneal dialysis
- candida albicans
- escherichia coli
- ejection fraction
- bone marrow
- prognostic factors
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- klebsiella pneumoniae