Triple threat: how diabetes results in worsened bacterial infections.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q3 IMMUNOLOGY Infection and Immunity Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Epub Date: 2024-03-25 DOI:10.1128/iai.00509-23
Benjamin P Darwitz, Christopher J Genito, Lance R Thurlow
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Abstract

Diabetes mellitus, characterized by impaired insulin signaling, is associated with increased incidence and severity of infections. Various diabetes-related complications contribute to exacerbated bacterial infections, including hyperglycemia, innate immune cell dysfunction, and infection with antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains. One defining symptom of diabetes is hyperglycemia, resulting in elevated blood and tissue glucose concentrations. Glucose is the preferred carbon source of several bacterial pathogens, and hyperglycemia escalates bacterial growth and virulence. Hyperglycemia promotes specific mechanisms of bacterial virulence known to contribute to infection chronicity, including tissue adherence and biofilm formation. Foot infections are a significant source of morbidity in individuals with diabetes and consist of biofilm-associated polymicrobial communities. Bacteria perform complex interspecies behaviors conducive to their growth and virulence within biofilms, including metabolic cross-feeding and altered phenotypes more tolerant to antibiotic therapeutics. Moreover, the metabolic dysfunction caused by diabetes compromises immune cell function, resulting in immune suppression. Impaired insulin signaling induces aberrations in phagocytic cells, which are crucial mediators for controlling and resolving bacterial infections. These aberrancies encompass altered cytokine profiles, the migratory and chemotactic mechanisms of neutrophils, and the metabolic reprogramming required for the oxidative burst and subsequent generation of bactericidal free radicals. Furthermore, the immune suppression caused by diabetes and the polymicrobial nature of the diabetic infection microenvironment may promote the emergence of novel strains of multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens. This review focuses on the "triple threat" linked to worsened bacterial infections in individuals with diabetes: (i) altered nutritional availability in diabetic tissues, (ii) diabetes-associated immune suppression, and (iii) antibiotic treatment failure.

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三重威胁:糖尿病如何导致细菌感染恶化。
以胰岛素信号受损为特征的糖尿病与感染的发病率和严重程度增加有关。各种与糖尿病相关的并发症都会导致细菌感染加剧,包括高血糖、先天性免疫细胞功能障碍和耐抗生素细菌菌株感染。糖尿病的一个主要症状是高血糖,导致血液和组织中葡萄糖浓度升高。葡萄糖是多种细菌病原体的首选碳源,高血糖会加剧细菌的生长和毒性。高血糖会促进已知会导致慢性感染的特定细菌毒力机制,包括组织粘附和生物膜形成。足部感染是糖尿病患者发病的重要原因,由生物膜相关的多微生物群落组成。细菌在生物膜中会表现出复杂的种间行为,这有利于它们的生长和毒力,包括代谢交叉进食和改变表型以更耐受抗生素治疗。此外,糖尿病引起的代谢功能障碍会损害免疫细胞的功能,导致免疫抑制。胰岛素信号受损会诱导吞噬细胞发生畸变,而吞噬细胞是控制和解决细菌感染的关键介质。这些畸变包括细胞因子谱的改变、中性粒细胞的迁移和趋化机制,以及氧化爆发和随后产生杀菌自由基所需的代谢重编程。此外,糖尿病引起的免疫抑制和糖尿病感染微环境的多微生物性质可能会促进新型耐多药细菌病原体菌株的出现。本综述重点探讨与糖尿病患者细菌感染恶化有关的 "三重威胁":(i) 糖尿病组织中营养供应的改变,(ii) 糖尿病相关免疫抑制,以及 (iii) 抗生素治疗失败。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Infection and Immunity
Infection and Immunity 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
6.50%
发文量
268
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Infection and Immunity (IAI) provides new insights into the interactions between bacterial, fungal and parasitic pathogens and their hosts. Specific areas of interest include mechanisms of molecular pathogenesis, virulence factors, cellular microbiology, experimental models of infection, host resistance or susceptibility, and the generation of innate and adaptive immune responses. IAI also welcomes studies of the microbiome relating to host-pathogen interactions.
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