| Literature DB >> 28477626 |
Casey Beppler1, Elif Tekin2, Cynthia White1, Zhiyuan Mao1, Jeffrey H Miller3, Robert Damoiseaux4, Van M Savage1,2,5, Pamela J Yeh6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In drug-drug interactions, there are surprising cases in which the growth inhibition of bacteria by a single antibiotic decreases when a second antibiotic is added. These interactions are termed suppressive and have been argued to have the potential to limit the evolution of resistance. Nevertheless, little attention has been given to suppressive interactions because clinical studies typically search for increases in killing efficiency and because suppressive interactions are believed to be rare based on pairwise studies.Entities:
Keywords: Antagonism; Antibiotics; Drug resistance; Higher-order interactions; Multiple stressors
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28477626 PMCID: PMC5420147 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-017-1017-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Summary of antibiotics used in three-drug experiments
| Drug | Drug abbreviation | Concentration rangea (xMIC) | MICa(μg/ml) | Main mechanism(s) of Action | Origin | Cidal-static |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clindamycin | CLI | 0.146–0.333 | 120 | Protein synthesis, 50S | Semi-synthetic | Bacteriostatic |
| Erythromycin | ERY | 0.080–0.400 | 150 | Protein synthesis, 50S | Natural | Bacteriostatic |
| Chloramphenicol | CHL | 0.203–0.374 | 187 | Protein synthesis, 50S | Natural | Bacteriostatic |
| Fusidic acid | FUS | 0.217–0.298 | 369 | Protein synthesis, 50S | Natural | Bacteriostatic |
| Gentamicin | GEN | 0.010–0.138 | 4 | Protein synthesis, 30S, aminoglycoside | Natural | Bactericidal |
| Tobramycin | TOB | 0.063–0.163 | 8 | Protein synthesis, 30S, aminoglycoside | Natural | Bactericidal |
| Streptomycin | STR | 0.056–0.278 | 18 | Protein synthesis, 30S, aminoglycoside | Natural | Bactericidal |
| Doxycycline | DOX | 0.182–0.318 | 2.2 | Protein synthesis, 30S | Semi-synthetic | Bacteriostatic |
| Cefoxitin | FOX | 0.150–0.193 | 6 | Cell wall | Semi-synthetic | Bactericidal |
| Ampicillin | AMP | 0.300–0.433 | 3 | Cell wall | Semi-synthetic | Bactericidal |
| Vancomycin | VAN | <0.350–0.750 | >100 | Cell wall | Natural | Bactericidal |
| Nitrofurantoin | NTR | 0.250–0.750 | 4 | Multiple mechanisms, DNA | Synthetic | Bactericidal |
| Ciprofloxacin | CPR | 0.200–0.375 | 0.04 | DNA gyrase | Synthetic | Bactericidal |
| Trimethoprim | TMP | 0.150–0.250 | 0.4 | Folic acid biosynthesis | Synthetic | Bacteriostatic |
ain wildtype, non-pathogenic E. coli BW25113
Fig. 1Suppressive three-drug interactions in E. coli BW25113. Growth measurements are shown for bacteria in single-drug, two-drug, and three-drug conditions relative to the no-drug control (100% growth, not shown). Emergent suppression was determined following Tekin et al. [19] (see Methods). The upper left figure is a schematic with X, Y, and Z representing three different drugs. Only the experimental data for the three-drug combination (X + Y + Z), the suppressed pairwise drug combination with the lowest growth (Y + Z), and the suppressor single drug (X) is shown. 46 triple combinations of a total 327 interaction measures were determined to be suppressive. Antibiotic abbreviations are as listed in Table 1
Fig. 2Comparison of suppressive interactions in pairwise versus emergent three-drug interactions. Bars represent the proportion of interactions that are classified as antagonistic suppressive in pairwise interactions (black) and in three-drug interactions (white) for three bacteria strains: wild-type, non-pathogenic E. coli BW25113; pathogenic E. coli CFT073; and non-pathogenic S. epidermidis 14990. For the data presented in this paper, 95% confidence intervals resulting from bootstrapping experiments are shown
Fig. 3Suppressor and suppressee antibiotics. For each antibiotic, the number of suppressive interactions in E. coli BW25113 in which it acts as the suppressor (x axis) and the suppressee (y axis) are plotted. Antibiotic abbreviations are as listed in Table 1