Commensal-pathogen dynamics structure disease outcomes during Clostridioides difficile colonization.
Skye R S FishbeinAnna L DeVeauxSakshi KhannaAura L FerreiroJames LiaoWesley AgeeJie NingBejan MahmudMiranda J WallaceTiffany HinkKimberly A ReskeJanaki GurugeSidh LeekhaErik R DubberkeGautam DantasPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Gastrointestinal colonization by Clostridioides difficile is common in healthcare settings and ranges in clinical presentation from asymptomatic carriage to lethal C. difficile infection (CDI). We used a systems biology approach to investigate why patients colonized with C. difficile have a range of outcomes. Microbiota-humanization of germ-free mice with fecal samples from toxigenic C. difficile carriers revealed a spectrum of virulence among clade 1 lineages and identified commensal Blautia associated with markers of non-pathogenic colonization. Using gnotobiotic mice engrafted with defined human microbiota, we observed strain-specific CDI severity across clade 1 strains. Yet, mice engrafted with a higher diversity community were protected from severe disease across all strains without suppression of C. difficile colonization. These results indicate that when colonization resistance has been breached without overt infection, commensals can attenuate a diversity of virulent strains without inhibiting pathogen colonization, providing insight into determinants of stable C. difficile carriage.