De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels

Antibiotic resistance is a kind of achievable drug resistance meaning that microorganisms are able to sustain and survive exposure to antibiotics. A major contribution to development of antibiotic resistance is the abuse of antibiotics in human and in veterinary medicine. Antibiotics have been use...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ilbäck, Carolina
Format: Second cycle, A2E
Language:Inglés
Inglés
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4963/
_version_ 1855570768360898560
author Ilbäck, Carolina
author_browse Ilbäck, Carolina
author_facet Ilbäck, Carolina
author_sort Ilbäck, Carolina
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Antibiotic resistance is a kind of achievable drug resistance meaning that microorganisms are able to sustain and survive exposure to antibiotics. A major contribution to development of antibiotic resistance is the abuse of antibiotics in human and in veterinary medicine. Antibiotics have been used for many decades but only during recent years studies have been published that have increased the understanding in the area of antibiotic input and consequences thereof on bacterial resistance. Thus, it was just recently published that bacterial strains can undergo rapid selection of resistant mutants at antibiotic concentrations far below MIC (Minimal Inhibitory Concentration). However, presently there are no studies at low antibiotic concentrations that have been able to show whether growth and development of de novo resistant mutants competitively can out grow the normal bacterial population. Therefore, the aim of this project was to investigate whether de novo resistant mutants of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli can appear and take over the normal bacterial population, and if this occurs also to isolate the resistant mutations for characterization. These are closely related bacteria but they differ in their target sites for antibiotic resistance i.e. S. typhimurium carries a cryptic aminoglycoside resistance gene, aadA, that can be up-regulated and thereby causing streptomycin resistance, while the most common low-cost mutations conferring resistance to ciprofloxacin in E. coli are in the gyrase gene gyrA. The results showed that concentrations of antibiotics far below MIC can select for de novo mutants with high antibiotic resistance both in S. typhimurium and E. coli. The novel findings regarding these resistant mutants are that they are likely to have lower fitness cost than previously studied resistance mutations (such as rpsL mutants for streptomycin) which means that these mutations may be new and different from those previously described.
format Second cycle, A2E
id RepoSLU4963
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateSort 2012
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU49632012-10-18T14:13:28Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4963/ De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels Ilbäck, Carolina Animal feeding Animal diseases Human medicine, health, and safety Antibiotic resistance is a kind of achievable drug resistance meaning that microorganisms are able to sustain and survive exposure to antibiotics. A major contribution to development of antibiotic resistance is the abuse of antibiotics in human and in veterinary medicine. Antibiotics have been used for many decades but only during recent years studies have been published that have increased the understanding in the area of antibiotic input and consequences thereof on bacterial resistance. Thus, it was just recently published that bacterial strains can undergo rapid selection of resistant mutants at antibiotic concentrations far below MIC (Minimal Inhibitory Concentration). However, presently there are no studies at low antibiotic concentrations that have been able to show whether growth and development of de novo resistant mutants competitively can out grow the normal bacterial population. Therefore, the aim of this project was to investigate whether de novo resistant mutants of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli can appear and take over the normal bacterial population, and if this occurs also to isolate the resistant mutations for characterization. These are closely related bacteria but they differ in their target sites for antibiotic resistance i.e. S. typhimurium carries a cryptic aminoglycoside resistance gene, aadA, that can be up-regulated and thereby causing streptomycin resistance, while the most common low-cost mutations conferring resistance to ciprofloxacin in E. coli are in the gyrase gene gyrA. The results showed that concentrations of antibiotics far below MIC can select for de novo mutants with high antibiotic resistance both in S. typhimurium and E. coli. The novel findings regarding these resistant mutants are that they are likely to have lower fitness cost than previously studied resistance mutations (such as rpsL mutants for streptomycin) which means that these mutations may be new and different from those previously described. 2012-10-15 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4963/7/ilback_c_121015.pdf Ilbäck, Carolina, 2012. De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Microbiology <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/4024.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-1780 eng
spellingShingle Animal feeding
Animal diseases
Human medicine, health, and safety
Ilbäck, Carolina
De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title_full De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title_fullStr De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title_full_unstemmed De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title_short De novo resistance mutations at sub-MIC levels
title_sort de novo resistance mutations at sub-mic levels
topic Animal feeding
Animal diseases
Human medicine, health, and safety
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4963/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4963/