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Resumen de Role of intestinal dysbiosis on gut colonization by bacterial pathogens

Ana Djukovic

  • The intestinal tract of virtually any metazoan, including mammals, is colonized with a complex microbial community to which we refer as intestinal or gut microbiota. One of the roles of the healthy intestinal microbiota is to protect the host against gut colonization with pathogenic bacteria through a phenomenon known as colonization resistance (CR). Dysbiosis of the intestinal microbiota, usually as a result of an antibiotic treatment, may lead to the disruption of the CR, and subsequent colonization with bacterial pathogens. However, and despite the importance, the role of the microbiota dysbiosis on the gut colonization by many bacterial pathogens, such as multidrug resistant Enterobacteriaceae, has not been elucidated: the members of the microbiota that confer CR and factors that promote colonization remain mostly unknown.

    The general aim of this thesis has been to improve the understanding of the role of the microbiota dysbiosis in gut colonization by bacterial pathogens. For this purpose, 3 projects have been established. In the first project we tried to elucidate the role of the microbiota dysbiosis on colonization by multidrug resistant Enterobacteriaceae (MRE) in mice. In the second project we investigated the risk factors and members of the microbiota associated with the MRE colonization in hospitalized patients. MRE infections represent a great threat for hospitalized patients. Specifically, acute leukemia patients are often colonized with MRE, probably due to the impaired CR as a result of intensive antibiotic treatments these patients receive. In the third project we studied the role of the microbiota dysbiosis on the development of Epizootic Rabbit Enteropathy (ERE). ERE is a severe gastrointestinal disease with a high percentage of mortality that occurs in young rabbits during first weeks post-weaning. ERE rabbits have been shown to suffer microbiota dysbiosis during the development of the disease. Moreover, the disease could be reproduced by contact between healthy and sick animals and by administration of cecal contents from ERE rabbits to healthy rabbits, suggesting that a pathogenic agent may be involved in the development of this intestinal pathology, although no causative agent has been identified until now.


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