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Get Free AccessSignificance The evolution of antibiotic resistance by pathogenic bacteria poses a major challenge for human health. Whereas it is clear that natural selection promotes resistance-conferring mutations, our understanding of the response of the mutation rate to antibiotics is limited. With hundreds of Escherichia coli cell lines evolving in a near-neutral scenario under exposure to the fluoroquinolone norfloxacin, this study reveals a significant linear relationship between the mutation rate and antibiotic concentration, while also demonstrating that antibiotic treatment compromises the efficiency of DNA oxidative-damage repair and postreplicative mismatch repair. Thus, antibiotics not only impose a selective challenge to target and off-target bacteria but also accelerate the rate of adaptation by magnifying the rate at which advantageous mutations arise.
Hongan Long, Samuel F. Miller, Chloe Strauss, Chaoxian Zhao, Lei Cheng, Zhiqiang Ye, Katherine Griffin, Ronald Te, Heewook Lee, Chi-Chun Chen, Michael E Lynch (2016). Antibiotic treatment enhances the genome-wide mutation rate of target cells. , 113(18), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1601208113.
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Type
Article
Year
2016
Authors
11
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1601208113
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