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Journal Article

Minimal surviving inoculum in collective antibiotic resistance

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Farr,  Andrew D.
Department Microbial Population Biology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Geyrhofer, L., Ruelens, P., Farr, A. D., Pesce, D., de Visser, J. A. G. M., & Brenner, N. (2023). Minimal surviving inoculum in collective antibiotic resistance. mBio, 14(2): e02456-22. doi:10.1128/mbio.02456-22.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000D-496F-6
Abstract
A common strategy used by bacteria to resist antibiotics is enzymatic degradation or modification. This reduces the antibiotic threat in the environment and is therefore potentially a collective mechanism that also enhances the survival of nearby cells. Collective resistance is of clinical significance, yet a quantitative understanding at the population level is still incomplete. Here, we develop a general theoretical framework of collective resistance by antibiotic degradation. Our modeling study reveals that population survival crucially depends on the ratio of timescales of two processes: the rates of population death and antibiotic removal. However, it is insensitive to molecular, biological, and kinetic details of the underlying processes that give rise to these timescales. Another important aspect of antibiotic degradation is the degree of cooperativity, related to the permeability of the cell wall to antibiotics and enzymes. These observations motivate a coarse-grained, phenomenological model, with two compound parameters representing the population’s race to survival and single-cell effective resistance. We propose a simple experimental assay to measure the dose-dependent minimal surviving inoculum and apply it to Escherichia coli expressing several types of β-lactamase. Experimental data analyzed within the theoretical framework corroborate it with good agreement. Our simple model may serve as a reference for more complex situations, such as heterogeneous bacterial communities.