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      Quinolone antibiotics induce Shiga toxin-encoding bacteriophages, toxin production, and death in mice.

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          Abstract

          Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) cause significant disease; treatment is supportive and antibiotic use is controversial. Ciprofloxacin but not fosfomycin causes Shiga toxin-encoding bacteriophage induction and enhanced Shiga toxin (Stx) production from E. coli O157:H7 in vitro. The potential clinical relevance of this was examined in mice colonized with E. coli O157:H7 and given either ciprofloxacin or fosfomycin. Both antibiotics caused a reduction in fecal STEC. However, animals treated with ciprofloxacin had a marked increase in free fecal Stx, associated with death in two-thirds of the mice, whereas fosfomycin did not. Experiments that used a kanamycin-marked Stx2 prophage demonstrated that ciprofloxacin, but not fosfomycin, caused enhanced intraintestinal transfer of Stx2 prophage from one E. coli to another. These observations suggest that treatment of human STEC infection with bacteriophage-inducing antibiotics, such as fluoroquinolones, may have significant adverse clinical consequences and that fluoroquinolone antibiotics may enhance the movement of virulence factors in vivo.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Infect Dis
          The Journal of infectious diseases
          University of Chicago Press
          0022-1899
          0022-1899
          Feb 2000
          : 181
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Tupper Research Institute, New England Medical Center, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
          Article
          JID990644
          10.1086/315239
          10669353
          300a42c3-f2ab-4429-83a6-1b6219b6c643
          History

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