| Literature DB >> 26552974 |
María José Gosalbes1, Jorge F Vázquez-Castellanos1, Cécile Angebault2, Paul-Louis Woerther2, Etienne Ruppé2, María Loreto Ferrús3, Amparo Latorre1, Antoine Andremont4, Andrés Moya5.
Abstract
Epidemiological and individual risk factors for colonization by enterobacteria producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (E-ESBL) have been studied extensively, but whether such colonization is associated with significant changes in the composition of the rest of the microbiota is still unknown. To address this issue, we assessed in an isolated Amerindian Guianese community whether intestinal carriage of E-ESBL was associated with specificities in gut microbiota using metagenomic and metatranscriptomic approaches. While the richness of taxa of the active microbiota of carriers was similar to that of noncarriers, the taxa were less homogeneous. In addition, species of four genera, Desulfovibrio, Oscillospira, Parabacteroides, and Coprococcus, were significantly more abundant in the active microbiota of noncarriers than in the active microbiota of carriers, whereas such was the case only for species of Desulfovibrio and Oscillospira in the total microbiota. Differential genera in noncarrier microbiota could either be associated with resistance to colonization or be the consequence of the colonization by E-ESBL.Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26552974 PMCID: PMC4704183 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.01528-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191