Litcius/Paper detail

Ancient Antibiotics, Ancient Resistance

Nicholas Waglechner, Elizabeth Culp, Gerard D. Wright

2021EcoSal Plus35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As the spread of antibiotic resistance threatens our ability to treat infections, avoiding the return of a preantibiotic era requires the discovery of new drugs. While therapeutic use of antibiotics followed by the inevitable selection of resistance is a modern phenomenon, these molecules and the genetic determinants of resistance were in use by environmental microbes long before humans discovered them. In this review, we discuss evidence that antibiotics and resistance were present in the environment before anthropogenic use, describing techniques including direct sampling of ancient DNA and phylogenetic analyses that are used to reconstruct the past. We also pay special attention to the ecological and evolutionary forces that have shaped the natural history of antibiotic biosynthesis, including a discussion of competitive versus signaling roles for antibiotics, proto-resistance, and substrate promiscuity of biosynthetic and resistance enzymes. Finally, by applying an evolutionary lens, we describe concepts governing the origins and evolution of biosynthetic gene clusters and cluster-associated resistance determinants. These insights into microbes' use of antibiotics in nature, a game they have been playing for millennia, can provide inspiration for discovery technologies and management strategies to combat the growing resistance crisis.

Topics & Concepts

Antibiotic resistanceAntibioticsResistance (ecology)BiologyAncient DNANatural selectionEvolutionary biologyDrug resistanceBiotechnologyGeneticsEcologyComputational biologySelection (genetic algorithm)MedicineComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceEnvironmental healthPopulationMicrobial Natural Products and BiosynthesisAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaEvolution and Genetic Dynamics