Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • Antibiotics-Driven Gut Microbiome Perturbation Alters Immunity to Vaccines in Humans.

Antibiotics-Driven Gut Microbiome Perturbation Alters Immunity to Vaccines in Humans.

Cell (2019-09-07)
Thomas Hagan, Mario Cortese, Nadine Rouphael, Carolyn Boudreau, Caitlin Linde, Mohan S Maddur, Jishnu Das, Hong Wang, Jenna Guthmiller, Nai-Ying Zheng, Min Huang, Amit A Uphadhyay, Luiz Gardinassi, Caroline Petitdemange, Michele Paine McCullough, Sara Jo Johnson, Kiran Gill, Barbara Cervasi, Jun Zou, Alexis Bretin, Megan Hahn, Andrew T Gewirtz, Steve E Bosinger, Patrick C Wilson, Shuzhao Li, Galit Alter, Surender Khurana, Hana Golding, Bali Pulendran
ABSTRACT

Emerging evidence indicates a central role for the microbiome in immunity. However, causal evidence in humans is sparse. Here, we administered broad-spectrum antibiotics to healthy adults prior and subsequent to seasonal influenza vaccination. Despite a 10,000-fold reduction in gut bacterial load and long-lasting diminution in bacterial diversity, antibody responses were not significantly affected. However, in a second trial of subjects with low pre-existing antibody titers, there was significant impairment in H1N1-specific neutralization and binding IgG1 and IgA responses. In addition, in both studies antibiotics treatment resulted in (1) enhanced inflammatory signatures (including AP-1/NR4A expression), observed previously in the elderly, and increased dendritic cell activation; (2) divergent metabolic trajectories, with a 1,000-fold reduction in serum secondary bile acids, which was highly correlated with AP-1/NR4A signaling and inflammasome activation. Multi-omics integration revealed significant associations between bacterial species and metabolic phenotypes, highlighting a key role for the microbiome in modulating human immunity.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
N-Hydroxysulfosuccinimide sodium salt, ≥98% (HPLC)