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Antibiotic Treatment Preventing Necrotising Enterocolitis Alters Urinary and Plasma Metabolomes in Preterm Pigs
Necrotising enterocolitis
(NEC) is a serious gut inflammatory condition
in premature neonates, onset and development of which depend on the
gut microbiome. Attenuation of the gut microbiome by antibiotics can
reduce NEC incidence and severity. However, how the antibiotics-suppressed
gut microbiome affects the whole-body metabolism in NEC-sensitive
premature neonates is unknown. In formula-fed preterm pigs, used as
a model for preterm infants, plasma and urinary metabolomes were investigated
by LC–MS and <sup>1</sup>H NMR, with and without antibiotic
treatment immediately after birth. While it reduced the gut microbiome
density and NEC lesions as previously reported, the antibiotic treatment
employed in the current study affected the abundance of 44 metabolites
in different metabolic pathways. In antibiotics-treated pigs, tryptophan
metabolism favored the kynurenine pathway, relative to the serotonin
pathway, as shown by specific metabolites. Metabolites associated
with the gut microbiome, including 3-phenyllactic acid, 4-hydroxyphenylacetic
acid, and phenylacetylglycine, all from phenylalanine, and three bile
acids showed lower levels in the antibiotics-treated pigs where the
gut microbiome was extensively attenuated. Findings in the current
study warrant further investigation of metabolic and developmental
consequences of antibiotic treatment in preterm neonates