Metabiosis underlies a microbiota permissive to Pseudomonadota and increases the risk of gut-borne bloodstream infection
Wucher, B. R.; Pardo-De la Hoz, C. J.; Stamper, I.; Sharma, S.; Kaune, D.; Bendale, P.; Peled, J.; Xavier, J.
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The gut microbiota contains trillions of bacteria essential to health, but also harbors potential pathogens. The phylum Pseudomonadota, which includes Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, typically composes <1% of the microbiota but causes disproportionate numbers of gut-borne bloodstream infections. Identifying the ecological dependencies that enable Pseudomonadota to cause gut-borne disease is important for human health. Here, we studied microbiota dynamics in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) to find that microbiota compositions permissive to Pseudomonadota had, following antibiotic prophylaxis, high levels of Bacteroides--a major reservoir of polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs). We tested the causality of this clinical association in a mouse co-colonization model and discovered that Bacteroides fragilis promotes Pseudomonas gut colonization and survival to ciprofloxacin, a drug commonly used as prophylactic in allo-HCT. In vitro experiments revealed a general mechanism by which diverse Pseudomonadota species depend on Bacteroides polysaccharide breakdown to grow better, form more biofilm, and survive ciprofloxacin treatment under anaerobic conditions, a type of ecological dependency termed metabiosis. Guided by this insight, we used metagenomics to identify the PUL-encoded functions underlying the metabiotic potential of a patients microbiota and establish a link to gut-derived Gram-negative bacteremia in allo-HCT. Together, our findings translate mechanistically based microbiome ecology into a clinically actionable framework for early risk stratification and intervention.
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