Researchers Attack Menacing “Superbug” That Kills at Least 29,000 People a Year

Clostridium difficile Bacteria

Clostridium difficile, or C. diff, is a highly contagious pathogen acquired in hospital settings.

Biologist Joseph Sorg is leading a team to analyze C. difficile, which kills at least 29,000 people a year.

Scientists around the world have been working in earnest to improve understanding of an increasingly virulent superbug, Clostridium difficile. The highly contagious hospital-acquired pathogen, designated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as one of the five most urgent threats to the U.S. healthcare system, causes more than 500,000 infections and 29,000 deaths each year at a total societal cost exceeding $5 billion.

Biologists at Texas A&M University and Baylor College of Medicine have teamed up in a novel National Institutes of Health-funded systems biology study aimed at tackling the problem at its source — the initial point of infection — in hopes of pinpointing what makes patients susceptible to it in the first place.

Prior studies have shown C. difficile infection to be strongly correlated with a high abundance of secondary bile acids that are toxic to C. difficile in laboratory settings. These small molecules are generated by a healthy gut microbiome from primary bile acids that are synthesized in the liver.

Texas A&M biologist and 2020 Chancellor’s EDGES Fellow Joseph Sorg says scientists have long viewed these small molecules as a key protector in preventing C. difficile infection. The research was first featured by Sorg Laboratory graduate student Andrea Martinez Aguirre in a paper published earlier this fall in the journal PLOS Pathogens with help from Tor Savidge’s group at Baylor College of Medicine.

“Many ongoing efforts are developing probiotic treatment options for C. diff-infected patients — efforts that focus on restoring secondary bile acids to patients,” Sorg said. “Our findings show that these treatments should instead focus on microbes that consume nutrients important for C. diff growth and that secondary bile acids are a red herring for protection.”

As the basis of their study, the team used mice derived germ-free at Baylor College of Medicine that were colonized with a single species of bacteria known to be involved in secondary bile acid generation and strongly correlated with a protective C. difficile environment. As an additional control measure, they selected a mutant mouse strain purchased through the NIH’s Knockout Mouse Project that was bred at Texas A&M and distinct for its inability to synthesize a major class of bile acids, thereby further limiting the secondary bile acid pool.

“Surprisingly, we found that mice colonized with these microbes (C. scindens, C. hiranonis, or C. leptum) protected against C. diff disease but did not produce secondary bile acids,” Sorg said.

Sorg joined the Texas A&M Department of Biology in 2010 and has been working since his postdoctoral days to unlock C. difficile’s basic science, from its physiology to its virulence. He earned his doctorate in microbiology at the University of Chicago in 2006, the same year the C. difficile genome was sequenced, and since has emerged as one of the pioneers of C. difficile study.

Reference: “Bile acid-independent protection against Clostridioides difficile infection” by Andrea Martinez Aguirre, Nazli Yalcinkaya, Qinglong Wu, Alton Swennes, Mary Elizabeth Tessier, Paul Roberts, Fabio Miyajima, Tor Savidge and Joseph A. Sorg, 19 October 2021, PLOS Pathogens.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010015

2 Comments on "Researchers Attack Menacing “Superbug” That Kills at Least 29,000 People a Year"

  1. Lisa Dickmeyer | August 10, 2022 at 4:41 pm | Reply

    The caption underneath the photo at the top of this article reads, “C. diff, is a highly contagious pathogen acquired in hospital settings.” Near the beginning of this article, a sentence begins with, “This highly contagious hospital-acquired pathogen…” Those sentences are FALSE! I have been fighting a C. diff infection with Dificid tablets since last Friday, August 5, 2022. I have not been in a hospital since July of 2008. I did not acquire this C. diff infection in a hospital! Please correct this erroneous information in this article; it might create a false sense of security in patients who do not use hospitals.

  2. So proud in your ignorance. In countries with good sanitation C. Diff. is mainly contracted in hospitals. If you caught it outside of a clinical setting you most likely ate food contaminated with a carriers fecal matter.

    The article is correct. No doubt you are truly an expert on the subject matter after less than a week high level internet research.

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