Antibiotic use during pregnancy is linked to offspring gut microbial dysbiosis, barrier disruption, and altered immunity along the gut–lung axis

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Abstract

Antibiotic use during pregnancy is associated with increased asthma risk in children. Since approximately 25% of women use antibiotics during pregnancy, it is important to identify the pathways involved in this phenomenon. We investigate how mother-to-offspring transfer of antibiotic-induced gut microbial dysbiosis influences immune system development along the gut–lung axis. Using a mouse model of maternal antibiotic exposure during pregnancy, we immunophenotyped offspring in early life and after asthma induction. In early life, prenatal-antibiotic exposed offspring exhibited gut microbial dysbiosis, intestinal inflammation (increased fecal lipocalin-2 and IgA), and dysregulated intestinal ILC3 subtypes. Intestinal barrier dysfunction in the offspring was indicated by a FITC-dextran intestinal permeability assay and circulating lipopolysaccharide. This was accompanied by increased T-helper (Th)17 cell percentages in the offspring's blood and lungs in both early life and after allergy induction. Lung tissue additionally showed increased percentages of RORγt T-regulatory (Treg) cells at both time points. Our investigation of the gut–lung axis identifies early-life gut dysbiosis, intestinal inflammation, and barrier dysfunction as a possible developmental programming event promoting increased expression of RORγt in blood and lung CD4+ T cells that may contribute to increased asthma risk.

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Alhasan, M. M., Hölsken, O., Duerr, C., Helfrich, S., Branzk, N., Philipp, A., … Conrad, M. L. (2023). Antibiotic use during pregnancy is linked to offspring gut microbial dysbiosis, barrier disruption, and altered immunity along the gut–lung axis. European Journal of Immunology, 53(10). https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.202350394

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