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Persistent enrichment of multidrug-resistant Klebsiella in oral and nasal communities during long-term starvation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The human mouth and nose can harbor opportunistic pathogens like Klebsiella, which often lead to serious infections and exhibit antibiotic resistance; understanding how these microbes spread among healthy and sick individuals is crucial.
  • - Research showed that Klebsiella species can thrive in stressed environments (like hospitals) by outcompeting other bacteria when nutrients are scarce, indicating their potential to become dominant in these settings.
  • - Analysis revealed that antibiotic-resistant Klebsiella strains found in healthy individuals are genetically similar to those isolated from patients, suggesting a possible link between community-acquired and hospital infections.

Article Abstract

Background: The human oral and nasal cavities can act as reservoirs for opportunistic pathogens capable of causing acute infection. These microbes asymptomatically colonize the human oral and nasal cavities which facilitates transmission within human populations via the environment, and they routinely possess clinically significant antibiotic resistance genes. Among these opportunistic pathogens, the Klebsiella genus stands out as a notable example, with its members frequently linked to nosocomial infections and multidrug resistance. As with many colonizing opportunistic pathogens, the essential transmission factors influencing the spread of Klebsiella species among both healthy and diseased individuals remain unclear.

Results: Here, we explored a possible explanation by investigating the ability of oral and nasal Klebsiella species to outcompete their native microbial community members under in vitro starvation conditions, which could be analogous to external hospital environments or the microenvironment of mechanical ventilators. When K. pneumoniae and K. aerogenes were present within a healthy human oral or nasal sample, the bacterial community composition shifted dramatically under starvation conditions and typically became enriched in Klebsiella species. Furthermore, introducing K. pneumoniae exogenously into a native microbial community lacking K. pneumoniae, even at low inoculum, led to repeated enrichment under starvation. Precise monitoring of K. pneumoniae within these communities undergoing starvation indicated rapid initial growth and prolonged viability compared to other members of the microbiome. K. pneumoniae strains isolated from healthy individuals' oral and nasal cavities also exhibited resistance to multiple classes of antibiotics and were genetically similar to clinical and gut isolates. In addition, we found that in the absence of Klebsiella species, other understudied opportunistic pathogens, such as Peptostreptococcus, increased in relative abundance under starvation conditions.

Conclusions: Our findings establish an environmental and microbiome community circumstance that allows for the enrichment of Klebsiella species and other opportunistic pathogens. Klebsiella's enrichment may hinge on its ability to quickly outgrow other members of the microbiome. The ability to outcompete other commensal bacteria and to persist under harsh environmental conditions could be an important factor that contributes to enhanced transmission in both commensal and pathogenic contexts. Video Abstract.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11264962PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-024-01854-5DOI Listing

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