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Antibiotics reverse damage caused to blood stem cells by chronic Salmonella

06.29.26 | Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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BEER-SHEVA, Israel, June 29, 2026 -- A new study from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) has revealed that long-term Salmonella infections severely damage blood stem cells—the essential factory cells in bone marrow that produce all the body's blood and immune cells. However, the research, published in Cell Reports ( https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2026.117474 ), proves that this damage is completely reversible. Giving an effective course of antibiotics fully restores the stem cells, allowing them to recover their health and rebuilding power.

The study was led by Prof. Roi Gazit and Dr. Ofir Cohen from BGU’s Shraga Segal Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Genetics in the Faculty of Health Sciences.

The Hidden Cost of Long-Term Infection

While short-term infections are known to temporarily disrupt blood production, the impact of a permanent, chronic bacterial illness on adult stem cells has been difficult to study. Using a long-term model of Salmonella , the BGU research team found that a persistent infection causes severe full-body stress, including weight loss and a heavily enlarged spleen as the body fights the bacteria.

Most importantly, the researchers discovered that just 14 days after infection, the blood stem cells lost almost all of their biological potency. When transplanted, these "sick" stem cells were completely unable to rebuild a healthy blood system or take root in a new host.

Why the Stem Cells Stop Working

To understand exactly what went wrong inside the bone marrow, the team used advanced single-cell genetic mapping to look at the stem cells one by one. In a healthy body, over 90% of blood stem cells stay completely dormant, or "asleep," a quiet state that protects them from genetic wear and tear.

The genetic mapping revealed that chronic Salmonella forces these cells into a dangerous spiral:

An Antibiotic Pathway to Full Recovery

The most promising part of the discovery is how quickly and completely the bone marrow can heal once the bacteria is cleared. When the chronic infection was treated with a curative course of antibiotics, the body recovered rapidly: weight returned to normal and enlarged spleens shrank back to their proper size.

Deep inside the bone marrow, the genetic mapping confirmed that the antibiotics successfully wiped away the damage signals. The hyperactive, exhausted stem cells calmed down at once and retreated back into their safe, dormant state. Lab tests verified that these cured stem cells completely regained their health, rebuilding blood and immune systems just as effectively as cells that had never been sick.

"Our findings introduce an important new rule for bone marrow transplants: cure the donor's infection and let the stem cells rest before trying to transplant them," the authors note. "By proving that adult stem cells can fully bounce back even after a severe, long-term bacterial challenge, this research highlights how critical it is to check a donor's immune health to guarantee a successful transplant".

Additional authors included Erez Elfassy, Omri Koren, Pinkhas Likhterov, and Roshina Thapa.

This work was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (ISF) (Grant No. 883/21 and 2802/22) and the Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) (Grant No. DKFZ#CA179 and 5912).

Cell Reports

10.1016/j.celrep.2026.117474)

Experimental study

Cells

Reversible loss of hematopoietic stem cells transplant potency by chronic Salmonella infection

1-Jun-2026

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Ehud Zion Waldoks
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
ezw@bgu.ac.il

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. (2026, June 29). Antibiotics reverse damage caused to blood stem cells by chronic Salmonella. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/12DGRXO1/antibiotics-reverse-damage-caused-to-blood-stem-cells-by-chronic-salmonella.html
MLA:
"Antibiotics reverse damage caused to blood stem cells by chronic Salmonella." Brightsurf News, Jun. 29 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/12DGRXO1/antibiotics-reverse-damage-caused-to-blood-stem-cells-by-chronic-salmonella.html.