The Cost of Antibiotic Resistance—from the Perspective of a Bacterium
- 28 September 2007
- book chapter
- Published by Wiley
- Vol. 207, 131-151
- https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470515358.ch9
Abstract
The possession of an antibiotic resistance gene clearly benefits a bacterium when the corresponding antibiotic is present. But does the resistant bacterium suffer a cost of resistance (i.e. a reduction in fitness) when the antibiotic is absent? If so, then one strategy to control the spread of resistance would be to suspend the use of a particular antibiotic until resistant genotypes declined to low frequency. Numerous studies have indeed shown that resistant genotypes are less fit than their sensitive counterparts in the absence of antibiotic, indicating a cost of resistance. But there is an important caveat: these studies have put antibiotic resistance genes into naïve bacteria, which have no evolutionary history of association with the resistance genes. An important question, therefore, is whether bacteria can overcome the cost of resistance by evolving adaptations that counteract the harmful side-effects of resistance genes. In fact, several experiments have shown that the cost of antibiotic resistance may be substantially diminished, even eliminated, by evolutionary changes in bacteria over rather short periods of time. As a consequence of this adaptation of bacteria to their resistance genes, it becomes increasingly difficult to eliminate resistant genotypes simply by suspending the use of antibiotics.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissemination of thestrA‐strBstreptomycin‐resistance genes among commensal and pathogenic bacteria from humans, animals, and plantsMolecular Ecology, 1996
- Effect of Sulbactam on Infections Caused by Imipenem-ResistantAcinetobacter calcoaceticusBiotypeanitratusThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993
- The ecology and evolution of tetracycline resistanceTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1992
- The Evolution of Plasmids Carrying Multiple Resistance Genes: The Role of Segregation, Transposition, and Homologous RecombinationThe American Naturalist, 1990
- Evolution of a bacteria/plasmid associationNature, 1988
- Stability of recombinant DNA and its effects on fitnessTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1988
- A Mathematical Method for Analysing Plasmid Stability in Micro-organismsMicrobiology, 1987
- The effect of genetic background on the fitness of diazinon resistance genotypes of the Australian sheep blowfly, Lucilia cuprinaHeredity, 1982
- Escherichia coli : High Resistance or Dependence on Streptomycin Produced by the Same AlleleScience, 1968
- Reversal of Antibiotic Resistance in Hospital Staphylococcal InfectionBMJ, 1960