Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/100194
Title: | What Is the Impact of Antibiotic Resistance Determinants on the Bacterial Death Rate? |
Author: | Luz, Bruno T. S. Rebelo, João S. Monteiro, Francisca Dionisio, Francisco |
Keywords: | bacterial death bacterial persistence antibiotic resistance epistasis bacterial fitness conjugative plasmid nalidixic acid rifampicin |
Issue Date: | Feb-2025 |
Publisher: | MDPI |
Citation: | Luz, B.T.S.; Rebelo, J.S.; Monteiro, F.; Dionisio, F. What Is the Impact of Antibiotic Resistance Determinants on the Bacterial Death Rate? Antibiotics 2025, 14, 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics14020201 |
Abstract: | Objectives: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are widespread, with resistance arising from chromosomal mutations and resistance genes located in the chromosome or in mobile genetic elements. While resistance determinants often reduce bacterial growth rates, their influence on bacterial death under bactericidal antibiotics remains poorly understood. When bacteria are exposed to bactericidal antibiotics to which they are susceptible, they typically undergo a two-phase decline: a fast initial exponentially decaying phase, followed by a persistent slow-decaying phase. This study examined how resistance determinants affect death rates during both phases. Methods: We analyzed the death rates of ampicillin-exposed Escherichia coli populations of strains sensitive to ampicillin but resistant to nalidixic acid, rifampicin, or both, and bacteria carrying the conjugative plasmids RN3 or R702. Results: Single mutants resistant to nalidixic acid or rifampicin decayed faster than sensitive cells during the early phase, whereas the double-resistant mutant exhibited prolonged survival. These contrasting impacts suggest epistatic interactions between both chromosomal mutations. Persistent-phase death rates for chromosomal mutants did not differ significantly from wild-type cells. In contrast, plasmid-carrying bacteria displayed distinct dynamics: R702 plasmid-bearing cells showed higher persistent-phase death rates than plasmid-free cells, while RN3 plasmid-bearing cells exhibited lower rates. Conclusions: Bactericidal antibiotics may kill bacteria resistant to other antibiotics more effectively than wild-type cells. Moreover, epistasis may occur when different resistance determinants occur in the same cell, impacting the bactericidal potential of the antibiotic of choice. These results have significant implications for optimizing bacterial eradication protocols in clinical settings, as well as in animal health and industrial food safety management. |
Peer review: | yes |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/100194 |
DOI: | 10.3390/antibiotics14020201 |
Appears in Collections: | cE3c - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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antibiotics-14-00201-v2.pdf | 5,37 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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