Bacteria harbor secret weapons against antibiotics
Bacteria
harbor secret weapons against antibiotics
Posted by: Deepak Kumar
The ability of
pathogenic bacteria to evolve resistance to antibiotic drugs poses a growing
threat to human health worldwide. And scientists have now discovered that some
of our microscopic enemies may be even craftier than we suspected, using hidden
genetic changes to promote rapid evolution under stress and developing
antibiotic resistance in more ways than previously thought. The results appear
in a new paper in the journal Biomicrofluidics
In the paper, researchers from Princeton University in New Jersey describe how they observed two similar strains of E.coli bacteria quickly developing similar levels of antibiotic resistance using surprisingly different genetic mutations. Developing different solutions to the same problem shows the bacteria have a diverse arsenal of genetic "weapons" they can develop to fight antibiotics, potentially making them more versatile and difficult to defeat.
In the paper, researchers from Princeton University in New Jersey describe how they observed two similar strains of E.coli bacteria quickly developing similar levels of antibiotic resistance using surprisingly different genetic mutations. Developing different solutions to the same problem shows the bacteria have a diverse arsenal of genetic "weapons" they can develop to fight antibiotics, potentially making them more versatile and difficult to defeat.

Realizing how
effectively bacteria can survive drugs is a sobering thought, Austin said.
"It teaches us that antibiotics have to be used much more carefully than
they have been up to this point," he said.
Accelerating Evolution
Austin and his
colleagues specialize in developing unique, fluid-filled microstructures to
test theories of bacterial evolution. Instead of using test tubes or Petri
dishes – uniform environments that, Austin notes, exist only in the "ivied
halls of academia" – the researchers build devices that they believe better
mimic natural ecological niches.
The team uses a
custom-made microfluidic device that contains approximately 1,000 connected
microhabitats in which populations of bacteria grow. The device generates
complex gradients of food and antibiotic drugs similar to what might be found in natural bacterial habitats
like the gut or other compartments inside a human body.
"In complex
environments the emergence of resistance can be far more rapid and profound
than would be expected from test tube experiments," Austin said.
From previous
experiments with the complex microfabricated devices, the researchers knew that
some ordinary, "wild-type" strains of E.coli bacteria
quickly evolved antibiotic resistance. They wondered if a mutant strain called
GASP, which reproduces more quickly with limited nutrients than the wild type,
would develop the same type of antibiotic resistance when exposed to the same
drug.
Secret Weapons Revealed
By sequencing the
genomes of wild type and GASP bacterial colonies that has been exposed to the
antibiotic ciprofloxacin (Cipro), the researchers found different genetic
mutations could lead to similar levels of antibiotic resistance. For example, two different mutant strains emerged: one of the
antibiotic-resistant GASP strains evolved in such a way that it no longer
needed to make biofilms in order to survive stress. It did so by
"borrowing" a piece of leftover DNA from a virus that infects
bacteria. The other strain did not do this excision, indicating that in
evolution the strains can hedge their bets.
Viruses routinely inject
their own DNA into bacteria and sometimes DNA sequences remain that no longer
seem to have any function in terms of viral replication. Under normal
circumstances the leftover DNA may neither help nor hinder the bacteria, but in
times of stress the bacteria can use the new DNA to rapidly evolve antibiotic
resistant mutations.
The results demonstrate
the subtlety and diversity of the tools that bacteria have to fight stress,
said Austin. He wonders whether our remaining effective methods for killing
bacteria, such as using ethanol to disinfect surfaces, are also vulnerable, and
his team plans to test whether bacteria in their devices can evolve ethanol
resistance.