(Press-News.org) In 2017, scientists at Cincinnati Children’s revealed that using antibiotics to protect newborns from dangerous infections often comes with a long-term consequence—a permanently underdeveloped immune system that can make children prone to poor outcomes from future lung infections.
Now a study published June 9, 2025, in Cell, details the mechanisms behind antibiotic-related immune disruptions, which in turn suggests a way to reverse or minimize the risk.
"These remarkable findings indicate that we might be able to protect at-risk infants through targeted supplementation," says senior author Hitesh Deshmukh, MD, PhD, a neonatologist with the Perinatal Institute at Cincinnati Children’s. “Our team tested a supplement that achieved positive results in mice, but this would require more testing and confirmation through human clinical trials before any clinical recommendations could be made.”
Antibiotics’ double-edged sword
Most of the research was conducted over four years by MD/PhD students Jake Stevens and Erica Culberson, both Albert B. Sabin Scholars at Cincinnati Children’s. They found that antibiotic-exposed infants develop fewer specialized "memory" T cells in their lungs—the immune system's frontline defenders against respiratory infections.
"We've discovered that the gut microbiome acts as a teacher for the developing immune system," Culberson says.
"When antibiotics disrupt this natural education process, it's like removing key chapters from a textbook. The immune system never learns crucial lessons about fighting respiratory infections," Stevens adds.
A Tale of Two Infants
The study compared data from mouse and human infants exposed to ampicillin, gentamicin, and vancomycin—all antibiotics frequently used in pregnant women and newborns—with those who maintained their natural gut bacteria. The differences were striking:
Antibiotic-exposed mouse and human infants had significantly reduced populations of protective CD8+ T cells in their lungs
These infants showed impaired ability to form "tissue-resident memory cells," specialized immune cells that live in the lungs and provide rapid protection against reinfection
In a mouse model, the immune deficits persisted into adulthood, suggesting permanent changes to immune development
A Microbial Connection
The research team identified a specific mechanism linking gut bacteria to lung immunity. They found that Bifidobacterium, a species of beneficial bacteria commonly found in healthy infant guts, produces a molecule called inosine. This metabolite acts as a critical signal for proper immune cell development.
"Think of inosine as a molecular messenger," Deshmukh says. "It travels from the gut to developing immune cells, telling them how to mature properly and prepare for future infections."
When antibiotics eliminate these beneficial bacteria, inosine levels plummet, and immune cells fail to receive proper developmental signals. The team discovered that this disruption affects a master regulator protein called NFIL3, which controls how T cells mature and function.
From Mice to Humans: Universal Findings
Importantly, Stevens and Culberson validated their findings in human infants. By analyzing lung tissue from infants who had died from various causes, they confirmed that antibiotic-exposed human babies showed the same immune deficits as those observed in mice.
The antibiotic-exposed infants had fewer influenza-specific memory T cells in their lungs and a reduced ability to mount effective immune responses when challenged with viral proteins. Their tissues also showed similar gene expression patterns to those seen in elderly individuals, who also are vulnerable to respiratory infections.
A Potential Solution: Inosine Supplementation
Perhaps most excitingly, when the team supplemented antibiotic-exposed infant mice with inosine, they observed significant restoration of immune function. The treatment:
Restored normal T cell development patterns
Improved the formation of protective memory cells
Enhanced resistance to influenza infection
Reduced illness severity when infections did occur
Next Steps
Deshmukh and colleagues emphasize that antibiotics remain life-saving medications that should be used when medically necessary.
“However, these findings suggest that clinicians should be judicious about antibiotic use during pregnancy and early infancy and consider probiotic or prebiotic interventions to support healthy microbiome development,” Deshmukh says.
Meanwhile, more research is needed to explore the potential value of inosine supplementation for at-risk infants and to develop other strategies to protect antibiotic-exposed infants from future respiratory infections.
About the Study
Cincinnati Children’s co-authors on this study also included: Jeremy Kinder, PhD, Alicia Ramiriqui, BS, Jerilyn Gray, MS, Madeline Bonfield, PhD, Tzu-Yu Shao, PhD, Faris Al Gharaibeh, MD, Laura Peterson, MD, Emily Eshleman, PhD, Shikha Negi, PhD, William Zacharias, MD, PhD, Theresa Alenghat, VMD, PhD, and Sing Sing Way, MD, PhD. The Flow Cytometry Laboratories at Cincinnati Children’s also contributed to this study.
Funding sources for this research included an F30 award and other grants from the National Institutes of Health, along with funding from the Francis Family Foundation and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund.
END
Discovery suggests method to offset antibiotic-caused harm to infant immune systems
In mice, inosine supplement restored normal T cell development and enhanced infection resistance, according to study published in Cell
2025-06-09
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[Press-News.org] Discovery suggests method to offset antibiotic-caused harm to infant immune systemsIn mice, inosine supplement restored normal T cell development and enhanced infection resistance, according to study published in Cell