The inoculum effect and band-pass bacterial response to periodic antibiotic treatment.
Cobertura |
England |
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Data(s) |
2012
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Resumo |
The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacterial density. It represents a unique strategy of antibiotic tolerance and it can complicate design of effective antibiotic treatment of bacterial infections. To gain insight into this phenomenon, we have analyzed responses of a lab strain of Escherichia coli to antibiotics that target the ribosome. We show that the IE can be explained by bistable inhibition of bacterial growth. A critical requirement for this bistability is sufficiently fast degradation of ribosomes, which can result from antibiotic-induced heat-shock response. Furthermore, antibiotics that elicit the IE can lead to 'band-pass' response of bacterial growth to periodic antibiotic treatment: the treatment efficacy drastically diminishes at intermediate frequencies of treatment. Our proposed mechanism for the IE may be generally applicable to other bacterial species treated with antibiotics targeting the ribosomes. |
Formato |
617 - ? |
Identificador |
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23047527 msb201249 Mol Syst Biol, 2012, 8 pp. 617 - ? http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10659 1744-4292 |
Idioma(s) |
ENG |
Relação |
Mol Syst Biol 10.1038/msb.2012.49 |
Palavras-Chave | #Anti-Bacterial Agents #Bacteria #Chloramphenicol #Colony Count, Microbial #Escherichia coli #Heat-Shock Response #Kanamycin #Kinetics #Microbial Sensitivity Tests #Models, Biological #Proteolysis #Ribosomes #Salmonella typhimurium |
Tipo |
Journal Article |