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Plasmid Viability Depends on the Ecological Setting of Hosts within a Multiplasmid Community

Cindy Given, Reetta Penttinen, Matti Jalasvuori

2022Microbiology Spectrum10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Conjugative and mobilizable plasmids are ubiquitous in bacterial systems. Several different plasmids can compete within a single bacterial community. We here show that the ecological setting of the host bacteria has a notable effect on the survival of individual plasmids. Selection for opportunistic genes such as antibiotic resistance genes and the presence of plasmid-free hosts can determine which plasmids survive in the system. Host bacteria appear to adapt specifically to a situation where there are multiple plasmids present instead of alleviating the plasmid-associated fitness costs of individual plasmids. Plasmids providing antibiotic resistance survived under all conditions even if there was a constant migration of higher-fitness plasmid-free hosts and no selection via antibiotics. This study is one of the first to observe the behavior of multiple genetically different plasmids as a part of a single system.

Topics & Concepts

PlasmidBiologyExtrachromosomal DNABacteriaGeneticsAntibiotic resistanceMicrobial population biologyEcologyPopulationGeneResistance (ecology)Mobile genetic elementsMicrobiologySociologyDemographyEvolution and Genetic DynamicsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBacteriophages and microbial interactions
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