6533b850fe1ef96bd12a84c2

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evolutionary rescue of bacteria via horizontal gene transfer under a lethal β-lactam concentration

Matti JalasvuoriJaana K. H. BamfordVille OjalaVille HoikkalaSari Mattila

subject

Microbiology (medical)Geneticsbiologymedicine.drug_classImmunologyAntibioticsta1182biology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyMicrobiologyAntibiotic resistancePlasmidAmpicillinHorizontal gene transfermedicineImmunology and AllergyMobile genetic elementsPathogenBacteriamedicine.drug

description

β-Lactams are a commonly used class of bactericidal antibiotics. The number of β-lactam-resistant pathogens is constantly increasing in hospitals around the world. Interestingly, most of the β-lactam-resistant bacteria carry mobile genetic elements, such as conjugative plasmids, that render the pathogen resistant. These elements mediate their own transfer from one bacterium to another, producing new resistant strains via horizontal gene transfer. Here we investigated whether it is possible that transfer of the resistance element from another bacterium may evolutionarily rescue a susceptible bacterium exposed to a lethal concentration of the β-lactam ampicillin. Indeed, the rescuing occurs even at very high, clinically significant antibiotic levels, suggesting that pathogens may acquire the resistance 'on the fly' from commensal bacteria during treatment.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jgar.2014.02.005