| Literature DB >> 25551290 |
Yongming Sang1, Frank Blecha2.
Abstract
Ecological immunology (or ecoimmunology) is a new discipline in animal health and immunology that extends immunologists' views into a natural context where animals and humans have co-evolved. Antibiotic resistance and tolerance (ART) in bacteria are manifested in antibiosis-surviving subsets of resisters and persisters. ART has emerged though natural evolutionary consequences enriched by human nosocomial and agricultural practices, in particular, wide use of antibiotics that overwhelms other ecological and immunological interactions. Most previous reviews of antibiotic resistance focus on resisters but overlook persisters, although both are fundamental to bacteria survival through antibiosis. Here, we discuss resisters and persisters together to contrast the distinct ecological responses of persisters during antibiotic stress and propose different regimens to eradicate persisters. Our intention is not only to provide an ecoimmunological interpretation, but also to use an ecoimmunological system to categorize available alternatives and promote the discovery of prospective approaches to relieve ART problems within the general scope of improving animal health. Thus, we will categorize available alternatives to antibiotics and envision applications of ecoimmunological tenets to promote related studies in animal production.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25551290 PMCID: PMC4384068 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens4010001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Current and prospective alternatives to antibiotics based on an ecoimmunological view.
| Groups | Examples* | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental prevention, husbandry and management techniques | Controlled therapeutic and particularly nontherapeutic antibiotic use in animal agriculture; all-in/all-out production; hygiene; drinking water quality control; | Most effective and preventive measures in the long term | Requires global collaboration, huge investment, and some measures are not feasible in developing countries/areas |
| Pathogenic bacteria | Bacteriophages and endolysins; predatory bacteria; | Pathogen-targeting to obtain control of epidemic infectious bacteria | All pathogen-killing measures have potential for directional selection of pathogenic resistance |
| Good for establishing inter-regulatory microbial system via community compulsion or ecological signaling | Most are based on black-box trials, there is a lack of mechanistic studies and effective measures to regulate pathogens over time | ||
| Animal immunity | Late weaning, colostrum quality and intake; egg yolk immunoglobins; antimicrobial peptides; | Host immunity-centered on promoting animal health in general or disease-targeting, to avoid AR development | Cost and challenges for developing cross-protective vaccines and immunological measures |
| Animal metabolism, physiology and inter-systemic interaction | Synergistic promotion of both animal growth and health, less chance to develop AR | Less effective during disease epidemics or pandemics | |
| Host-pathogen interaction | A non-killing measure to effectively suppress on-site infections and less chance to develop AR | Requires identification of key components mediating pathogen-host interaction, more suitable for viral diseases |
*Format legends: Italic, have multiple action models, such as both bactericidal and animal regulation roles of metals and minerals; Bold, most recently studied or prospective alternatives to antibiotics germane to an ecoimmunological view. Abbreviation: AR, antibiotic resistance; c-di-AMP/GMP: cyclic diadenylate/diguanylate monophosphate; CRISPR, bacterial clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR); Cas9 CRISPR-associated protein 9 nuclease. See Section 3 and 4 for details and related references.