TY - JOUR
T1 - Antibiotic resistant bacteria survive treatment by doubling while shrinking
AU - Campey, Adrian
AU - Łapińska, Urszula
AU - Chait, Remy
AU - Tsaneva-Atanasova, Krasimira
AU - Pagliara, Stefano
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Campey et al.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Many antibiotics that are used in healthcare, farming, and aquaculture end up in environments with different spatial structures that might promote heterogeneity in the emergence of antibiotic resistance. However, the experimental evolution of microbes at sub-inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics has been mainly carried out at the population level which does not allow capturing single-cell responses to antibiotics. Here, we investigate and compare the emergence of resistance to ciprofloxacin in Escherichia coli in well-mixed and structured environments using experimental evolution, genomics, and microfluidicsbased time-lapse microscopy. We discover that resistance to ciprofloxacin and cross-resistance to other antibiotics is stronger in the well-mixed environment due to the emergence of target mutations, whereas efflux regulator mutations emerge in the structured environment. The latter mutants also harbor sub-populations of persisters that survive high concentrations of ciprofloxacin that inhibit bacterial growth at the population level. In contrast, genetically resistant bacteria that display target mutations also survive high concentrations of ciprofloxacin that inhibit their growth via population-level antibiotic tolerance. These resistant and tolerant bacteria keep doubling while shrinking in size in the presence of ciprofloxacin and regain their original size after antibiotic removal, which constitutes a newly discovered phenotypic response. This new knowledge sheds light on the diversity of strategies employed by bacteria to survive antibiotics and poses a stepping stone for understanding the link between mutations at the population level and phenotypic single-cell responses.
AB - Many antibiotics that are used in healthcare, farming, and aquaculture end up in environments with different spatial structures that might promote heterogeneity in the emergence of antibiotic resistance. However, the experimental evolution of microbes at sub-inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics has been mainly carried out at the population level which does not allow capturing single-cell responses to antibiotics. Here, we investigate and compare the emergence of resistance to ciprofloxacin in Escherichia coli in well-mixed and structured environments using experimental evolution, genomics, and microfluidicsbased time-lapse microscopy. We discover that resistance to ciprofloxacin and cross-resistance to other antibiotics is stronger in the well-mixed environment due to the emergence of target mutations, whereas efflux regulator mutations emerge in the structured environment. The latter mutants also harbor sub-populations of persisters that survive high concentrations of ciprofloxacin that inhibit bacterial growth at the population level. In contrast, genetically resistant bacteria that display target mutations also survive high concentrations of ciprofloxacin that inhibit their growth via population-level antibiotic tolerance. These resistant and tolerant bacteria keep doubling while shrinking in size in the presence of ciprofloxacin and regain their original size after antibiotic removal, which constitutes a newly discovered phenotypic response. This new knowledge sheds light on the diversity of strategies employed by bacteria to survive antibiotics and poses a stepping stone for understanding the link between mutations at the population level and phenotypic single-cell responses.
KW - antibiotic tolerance
KW - antimicrobial resistance
KW - efflux
KW - environmental structure
KW - evolution
KW - microfluidics
KW - mutations
KW - persisters
KW - sequencing
KW - single-cell analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85211993678&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/mbio.02375-24
DO - 10.1128/mbio.02375-24
M3 - Article
C2 - 39565111
AN - SCOPUS:85211993678
SN - 2161-2129
VL - 15
JO - mBio
JF - mBio
IS - 12
ER -