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Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation

Anupama Khare, Saeed Tavazoie

2020mSystems42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial persistence is a fascinating phenomenon in which a small subpopulation of bacteria becomes phenotypically tolerant to lethal antibiotic exposure. There is growing evidence that populations of bacteria in chronic clinical infections develop a hyperpersistent phenotype, enabling a substantially larger subpopulation to survive repeated antibiotic treatment. The mechanisms of persistence and modes of increasing persistence rates remain largely unknown. Here, we utilized experimental evolution to select for Escherichia coli mutants that have more than a thousandfold increase in persistence rates. We discovered that a variety of individual mutations to translation-related processes are causally involved. Furthermore, we found that these mutations lead to population heterogeneity in the expression of specific genes. We show that this can be used to isolate populations in which the majority of bacteria are persisters, thereby enabling systems-level characterization of this fascinating and clinically significant microbial phenomenon.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPersistence (discontinuity)GeneticsGenePhenotypePopulationAntibiotic resistanceMultidrug toleranceMutationAntibioticsMutantBacterial geneticsBacteriaEscherichia coliBiofilmMedicineEngineeringEnvironmental healthGeotechnical engineeringEvolution and Genetic DynamicsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
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