Victoria E. Ruiz
New York University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Victoria E. Ruiz.
Nature Communications | 2015
Yael R. Nobel; Laura M. Cox; Francis F. Kirigin; Nicholas A. Bokulich; Shingo Yamanishi; Isabel Teitler; Jennifer Chung; Jiho Sohn; Cecily M. Barber; David S. Goldfarb; Kartik Raju; Sahar Abubucker; Yanjiao Zhou; Victoria E. Ruiz; Huilin Li; Makedonka Mitreva; Alexander V. Alekseyenko; George M. Weinstock; Erica Sodergren; Martin J. Blaser
Mammalian species have co-evolved with intestinal microbial communities that can shape development and adapt to environmental changes, including antibiotic perturbation or nutrient flux. In humans, especially children, microbiota disruption is common, yet the dynamic microbiome recovery from early-life antibiotics is still uncharacterized. Here we use a mouse model mimicking paediatric antibiotic use and find that therapeutic-dose pulsed antibiotic treatment (PAT) with a beta-lactam or macrolide alters both host and microbiota development. Early-life PAT accelerates total mass and bone growth, and causes progressive changes in gut microbiome diversity, population structure and metagenomic content, with microbiome effects dependent on the number of courses and class of antibiotic. Whereas control microbiota rapidly adapts to a change in diet, PAT slows the ecological progression, with delays lasting several months with previous macrolide exposure. This study identifies key markers of disturbance and recovery, which may help provide therapeutic targets for microbiota restoration following antibiotic treatment.
Nature microbiology | 2018
Anjelique Schulfer; Thomas Battaglia; Yelina Alvarez; Luc Bijnens; Victoria E. Ruiz; Melody L. Ho; Serina L. Robinson; Tonya Ward; Laura M. Cox; Arlin B. Rogers; Dan Knights; R. Balfour Sartor; Martin J. Blaser
Antibiotic exposure in children has been associated with the risk of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Antibiotic use in children or in their pregnant mother can affect how the intestinal microbiome develops, so we asked whether the transfer of an antibiotic-perturbed microbiota from mothers to their children could affect their risk of developing IBD. Here we demonstrate that germ-free adult pregnant mice inoculated with a gut microbial community shaped by antibiotic exposure transmitted their perturbed microbiota to their offspring with high fidelity. Without any direct or continued exposure to antibiotics, this dysbiotic microbiota in the offspring remained distinct from controls for at least 21 weeks. By using both IL-10-deficient and wild-type mothers, we showed that both inoculum and genotype shape microbiota populations in the offspring. Because IL10−/− mice are genetically susceptible to colitis, we could assess the risk due to maternal transmission of an antibiotic-perturbed microbiota. We found that the IL10−/− offspring that had received the perturbed gut microbiota developed markedly increased colitis. Taken together, our findings indicate that antibiotic exposure shaping the maternal gut microbiota has effects that extend to the offspring, with both ecological and long-term disease consequences.Inoculation of pregnant dams with an antibiotic-perturbed microbiota resulted in vertical transmission to the offspring in the absence of antibiotics and increased colitis in IL10–/– mice, indicating that antibiotic treatment has long-term effects.
Nature Communications | 2017
Victoria E. Ruiz; Thomas Battaglia; Zachary D. Kurtz; Luc Bijnens; Amy Ou; Isak Engstrand; Xuhui Zheng; Tadasu Iizumi; Briana J. Mullins; Christian Müller; Ken Cadwell; Richard Bonneau; Guillermo I. Perez-Perez; Martin J. Blaser
Broad-spectrum antibiotics are frequently prescribed to children. Early childhood represents a dynamic period for the intestinal microbial ecosystem, which is readily shaped by environmental cues; antibiotic-induced disruption of this sensitive community may have long-lasting host consequences. Here we demonstrate that a single pulsed macrolide antibiotic treatment (PAT) course early in life is sufficient to lead to durable alterations to the murine intestinal microbiota, ileal gene expression, specific intestinal T-cell populations, and secretory IgA expression. A PAT-perturbed microbial community is necessary for host effects and sufficient to transfer delayed secretory IgA expression. Additionally, early-life antibiotic exposure has lasting and transferable effects on microbial community network topology. Our results indicate that a single early-life macrolide course can alter the microbiota and modulate host immune phenotypes that persist long after exposure has ceased.High or multiple doses of macrolide antibiotics, when given early in life, can perturb the metabolic and immunological development of lab mice. Here, Ruiz et al. show that even a single macrolide course, given early in life, leads to long-lasting changes in the gut microbiota and immune system of mice.
Archives of Medical Research | 2017
Tadasu Iizumi; Thomas Battaglia; Victoria E. Ruiz; Guillermo I. Perez Perez
Despite that the human gastrointestinal tract is the most populated ecological niche by bacteria in the human body, much is still unknown about its characteristics. This site is highly susceptible to the effects of many external factors that may affect in the quality and the quantity of the microbiome. Specific factors such as diet, personal hygiene, pharmacological drugs and the use of antibiotics can produce a significant impact on the gut microbiota. The effect of these factors is more relevant early in life, when the gut microbiota has not yet fully established. In this review, we discussed the effect of type and doses of the antibiotics on the gut microbiota and what the major consequences in the use and abuse of these antimicrobial agents.
eLife | 2018
Xue-Song Zhang; Jackie Li; Kimberly A. Krautkramer; Michelle H. Badri; Thomas Battaglia; Timothy C. Borbet; Hyunwook Koh; Sandy Ng; Rachel A. Sibley; Yuanyuan Li; Wimal Pathmasiri; Shawn Jindal; Robin Shields-Cutler; Ben Hillmann; Gabriel A. Al-Ghalith; Victoria E. Ruiz; Alexandra Livanos; Angélique B van ‘t Wout; Nabeetha Nagalingam; Arlin B. Rogers; Susan Sumner; Dan Knights; John M. Denu; Huilin Li; Kelly V. Ruggles; Richard Bonneau; R. Anthony Williamson; Marcus Rauch; Martin J. Blaser
The early-life intestinal microbiota plays a key role in shaping host immune system development. We found that a single early-life antibiotic course (1PAT) accelerated type 1 diabetes (T1D) development in male NOD mice. The single course had deep and persistent effects on the intestinal microbiome, leading to altered cecal, hepatic, and serum metabolites. The exposure elicited sex-specific effects on chromatin states in the ileum and liver and perturbed ileal gene expression, altering normal maturational patterns. The global signature changes included specific genes controlling both innate and adaptive immunity. Microbiome analysis revealed four taxa each that potentially protect against or accelerate T1D onset, that were linked in a network model to specific differences in ileal gene expression. This simplified animal model reveals multiple potential pathways to understand pathogenesis by which early-life gut microbiome perturbations alter a global suite of intestinal responses, contributing to the accelerated and enhanced T1D development.
Archive | 2014
Martin J. Blaser; Shingo Yamanishi; Laura M. Cox; Victoria E. Ruiz; Alexandra Livanos
Best Practice & Research in Clinical Gastroenterology | 2014
Laura Otero; Victoria E. Ruiz; Guillermo I. Perez Perez
Gastroenterology | 2016
Anjelique Schulfer; Yelina Alvarez; Melody L. Ho; Luc Bijnens; Victoria E. Ruiz; Thomas Battaglia; Laura M. Cox; Arlin B. Rogers; Martin J. Blaser; R. Balfour Sartor
Gastroenterology | 2016
Lea Ann Chen; Victoria E. Ruiz; Thomas Battaglia; Arun Swaminath; Arielle Radin; Michael Tuen; Ruliang Xu; Yelina Alvarez; Rowann Bowcutt; Dana J. Lukin; Garrett Lawlor; Melissa H. Rosen; David Hudesman; Lisa Malter; P'ng Loke; R. Balfour Sartor; Martin J. Blaser
Journal of Immunology | 2015
Victoria E. Ruiz; Isabel Teitler; Amy Ou; Laura Weber; Edith Chess; Thomas Battaglia; Ken Cadwell; Martin J. Blaser