Stalking a wily foe: U-M scientists figure out how C. difficile bacteria wreak havoc in the gut
ANN
ARBOR—Sometimes, science means staying awake for two days straight.But losing sleep is a small sacrifice to make, if you want
to learn more about tiny bacteria that sicken half a million Americans each
year, kill more than 14,000 of them, and rack up $4.8 billion in health care
costs.
That's what drove a team of University of Michigan
scientists to work around the clock to study the bacterium called Clostridium
difficile, or C. difficile, the bane of hospitals and nursing homes. Most
patients develop it after taking antibiotics.
In a new paper in the journal Infection and Immunity, the
researchers lay out for the first time exactly how C. difficile wreaks havoc on
the guts of animals in a short time, and causes severe diarrhea and
life-threatening disease in humans.
Despite the heavy toll the organism takes, no team had
ever been able to measure C. difficile activity over time in this way. Their
findings could help lead to better prevention and treatment of C. difficile
infections.
A fast track to disease
The researchers started by introducing C. difficile spores
into mice via their mouths—similar to what might happen in a hospital
environment where spores from past patients' infections abound. Then, they
studied what happened after the spores entered the body, by taking gut samples
at regular intervals and studying them under special conditions. The animals
had all received antibiotics.
Through their hours-long surveillance, the researchers
found that it took C. difficile only about 24 hours to go from hard spores to
toxin-producing, diarrhea-inducing cells all the way at the other end of the
digestive tract, in the large intestine.
The researchers also show that bile acids
in the gut "woke up" the dormant bacteria spores, and that they grow
into cells in the small intestine within 24 hours of exposure.
Because
antibiotics disrupted the gut's normal community of other bacteria—called the
gut microbiome—C. difficile cells could continue to the large intestine and
start their toxic effects on the cells that line the gut. When they tested the
contents of the small intestine separately, they also showed this happens
whether or not the animals have received antibiotics.
In the large intestine, they even saw how C. difficile
cells formed spores again—allowing them to survive the exit from the body in
feces and go on to infect a new host.
"If we can understand the process that specific
bacteria use to germinate and get established, we may be able to intervene more
effectively," said Dr. Vincent Young, the senior author of the new study,
a professor at the U-M Medical School and co-leader of the school's Host
Microbiome Initiative. "We assume that antibiotics change the gut
microbiome, but we haven't known how that allows C. difficile to gain a
foothold and begin to ramp up growth."
First author Mark Koenigsknecht, a postdoctoral fellow in
Young's lab who is now continuing his research at the U-M College of Pharmacy,
was one of the researchers who was up all night to get data for the experiment.
"We introduced 100 spores through the mouth, and
within six hours we could find 1,000 cells in the intestinal tract," he
said. "We chose this strain of C. difficile because of its rapid ability
to cause disease in animals, but we didn't think it would happen that
quickly."
Tracking C. difficile's effect on the gut
The U-M
team used a mouse model they developed, and a common antibiotic in the
cephalosporin class. The strain of C. difficile used in the experiment
originated with a patient years ago, but is available for purchase as a
laboratory culture.
Working in facilities made possible by the Host Microbiome
Initiative, they took samples at regular intervals from seven different areas
of the digestive tracts of the mice. They then whisked the samples into special
oxygen-free facilities, called anaerobic chambers, that allowed them to see the
amount and forms of C. difficile present in each gut region.
With the help of Patrick Schloss, a professor in the U-M
Department of Microbiology & Immunology, the researchers used DNA analysis
to see what the entire gut microbiome looked like in antibiotic-treated animals
and those that hadn't been treated. The antibiotics really disrupted the
community of bacteria in the small intestine, and C. difficile came to dominate
in 36 hours.
They also examined the intestinal tract under a
microscope. The toxin produced by C. difficile cells in their vegetative, or
growing, state causes an effect on the cells that line the digestive tract,
causing them to become "leaky," raising the alarm among nearby immune
system cells and leading to diarrhea. The cell changes were seen in the large intestine
about 30 hours after spore introduction.
Next steps
Koenigsknecht notes that this is the first time
researchers have seen in a living animal that toxin production, and production
of new spores of C. difficile capable of surviving outside the body, occur at
the same time. This indication that the two processes are linked, and that they
are switched on by some factor in the body, is intriguing, he says.
Now, the effort to figure out what that signal is, whether
different strains of C. difficile act differently, and who is most vulnerable
to its effects, will continue.
Koenigsknecht has teamed with College of Pharmacy
professors to test the use of a seven-foot-long tube that can be threaded down
the human digestive tract and used to retrieve samples at different locations
along the way. Originally developed for testing how drugs are broken down and
used by the body, it could provide an entirely new window into the human
microbiome.
"Now that we understand what C. difficile is doing,
we can also go and ask more questions about how the machinery inside the cell
is turning on," he said. "We have to know how to study it before we
can cure it." Animal-based research is vital to this effort.
Young says there are many ways C. difficile could take
over an antibiotic-decimated gut.
"Does it prevent other bacteria from growing, or
outcompete them by eating faster? Does it communicate with the cells of the gut
lining? We're trying to figure out the interaction between the 'good bugs' and
the 'bad bugs', and the lining of the gut," said Young, an associate
professor of infectious diseases and of microbiology and immunology.
In addition to Young, Schloss and Koenigsknecht, the
study's authors are Casey Theriot, Ingrid Bergin and Cassie Schumacher. The
research was funded by the National Institutes of Health grants U19AI090871,
K01GM109236 and 5R01GM099514. It used the U-M Metabolomics Core, funded by NIH
grant U24 DK097153. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and
does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of
Health.
Contact Kara
Gavin, 734-764-2220, kegavin@umich.edu
Reference: Infection and Immunity, doi:
10.1128/IAI.02768-14, March 2015 vol. 83 no. 3 934-941
