Literature DB >> 20624092

Hypermutability and compensatory adaptation in antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Gabriel G Perron1, Alex R Hall, Angus Buckling.   

Abstract

Hypermutable (mutator) bacteria have been associated with the emergence of antibiotic resistance. A simple yet untested prediction is that mutator bacteria are able to compensate more quickly for pleiotropic fitness costs often associated with resistance, resulting in the maintenance of resistance in the absence of antibiotic selection. By using experimental populations of a wild-type and a mutator genotype of the pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, we show that mutator bacteria can evolve resistance to antibiotics more rapidly than wild-type bacteria and, crucially, that mutators are better able to compensate for the fitness cost of resistance, to the extent that all costs of resistance were entirely compensated for in mutators. When competed against immigrant antibiotic-susceptible bacteria in the absence of antibiotics, antibiotic resistance remained at a high level in mutator populations but disappeared in wild-type populations. These results suggest that selection for mutations that offset the fitness cost associated with antibiotic resistance may help to explain the high frequency of mutator bacteria and antibiotic resistance observed in chronic infections.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20624092     DOI: 10.1086/655217

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  25 in total

1.  Effects of sequential and simultaneous applications of bacteriophages on populations of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in vitro and in wax moth larvae.

Authors:  Alex R Hall; Daniel De Vos; Ville-Petri Friman; Jean-Paul Pirnay; Angus Buckling
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-06-01       Impact factor: 4.792

2.  Genotypic and phenotypic variation in Pseudomonas aeruginosa reveals signatures of secondary infection and mutator activity in certain cystic fibrosis patients with chronic lung infections.

Authors:  Ashley E Warren; Carla M Boulianne-Larsen; Christine B Chandler; Kami Chiotti; Evgueny Kroll; Scott R Miller; Francois Taddei; Isabelle Sermet-Gaudelus; Agnes Ferroni; Kathleen McInnerney; Michael J Franklin; Frank Rosenzweig
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2011-09-19       Impact factor: 3.441

3.  Multidrug therapy and evolution of antibiotic resistance: when order matters.

Authors:  Gabriel G Perron; Sergey Kryazhimskiy; Daniel P Rice; Angus Buckling
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-06-22       Impact factor: 4.792

Review 4.  The population genetics of antibiotic resistance: integrating molecular mechanisms and treatment contexts.

Authors:  R Craig MacLean; Alex R Hall; Gabriel G Perron; Angus Buckling
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 53.242

Review 5.  Hypermutation and stress adaptation in bacteria.

Authors:  R Jayaraman
Journal:  J Genet       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 1.166

6.  Bacterial adaptation to sublethal antibiotic gradients can change the ecological properties of multitrophic microbial communities.

Authors:  Ville-Petri Friman; Laura Melissa Guzman; Daniel C Reuman; Thomas Bell
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-05-07       Impact factor: 5.349

7.  Bypass of genetic constraints during mutator evolution to antibiotic resistance.

Authors:  Alejandro Couce; Alexandro Rodríguez-Rojas; Jesús Blázquez
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-04-07       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 8.  Interplay Between Antibiotic Resistance and Virulence During Disease Promoted by Multidrug-Resistant Bacteria.

Authors:  Edward Geisinger; Ralph R Isberg
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 5.226

9.  Mutation accumulation and fitness in mutator subpopulations of Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Ram P Maharjan; Bin Liu; Yang Li; Peter R Reeves; Lei Wang; Thomas Ferenci
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2012-12-05       Impact factor: 3.703

10.  Developing controllable hypermutable Clostridium cells through manipulating its methyl-directed mismatch repair system.

Authors:  Guodong Luan; Zhen Cai; Fuyu Gong; Hongjun Dong; Zhao Lin; Yanping Zhang; Yin Li
Journal:  Protein Cell       Date:  2013-11-10       Impact factor: 14.870

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