Treatment of Mouse Infants with Amoxicillin, but Not the Human Milk-Derived Antimicrobial HAMLET, Impairs Lung Th17 Responses

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Abstract

Emerging evidence suggests differential effects of therapeutic antibiotics on infant T cell responses to pathogens. In this study, we explored the impact of the treatment of mouse infants with amoxicillin and the human milk-derived antimicrobial HAMLET (human alpha-lactalbumin made lethal to tumor cells) on T cell responses to Streptococcus pneumoniae. Lung cells and splenocytes were isolated from the infant mice subjected to intranasal administration of amoxicillin, HAMLET, or a combination of HAMLET and amoxicillin, and cultured with S. pneumoniae to measure T cell responses. After in-vitro stimulation with S. pneumoniae, lung cells from amoxicillin- or amoxicillin plus HAMLET-treated mice produced lower levels of Th17 (IL-17A), but not Th1 (IFN-γ), cytokine than mice receiving HAMLET or PBS. IL-17A/IFN-γ cytokine levels produced by the stimulated splenocytes, on the other hand, revealed no significant difference among treatment groups. Further analysis of T cell cytokine profiles by flow cytometry showed that lung CD4+, but not CD8+, T cells from amoxicillin- or HAMLET plus amoxicillin-treated mice expressed decreased levels of IL-17A compared to those from HAMLET-exposed or control mice. Collectively, these results indicate that exposure of infant mice to amoxicillin, but not HAMLET, may suppress lung Th17 responses to S. pneumoniae.

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Shekhar, S., Brar, N. K., Håkansson, A. P., & Petersen, F. C. (2023). Treatment of Mouse Infants with Amoxicillin, but Not the Human Milk-Derived Antimicrobial HAMLET, Impairs Lung Th17 Responses. Antibiotics, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020423

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