Adaptation at different points along antibiotic concentration gradients

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Antibiotic concentrations vary dramatically in the body and the environment. Hence, understanding the dynamics of resistance evolution along antibiotic concentration gradients is critical for predicting and slowing the emergence and spread of resistance. While it has been shown that increasing the concentration of an antibiotic slows resistance evolution, how adaptation to one antibiotic concentration correlates with fitness at other points along the gradient has not received much attention. Here, we selected populations of Escherichia coli at several points along a concentration gradient for three different antibiotics, asking how rapidly resistance evolved and whether populations became specialized to the antibiotic concentration they were selected on. Populations selected at higher concentrations evolved resistance more slowly but exhibited equal or higher fitness across the whole gradient. Populations selected at lower concentrations evolved resistance rapidly, but overall fitness in the presence of antibiotics was lower. However, these populations readily adapted to higher concentrations upon subsequent selection. Our results indicate that resistance management strategies must account not only for the rates of resistance evolution but also for the fitness of evolved strains.

Original languageEnglish
Article number20200913
JournalBiology Letters
Volume17
Issue number5
Number of pages6
ISSN1744-9561
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

    Research areas

  • antibiotic resistance, drug dose, adaptation, BENEFICIAL MUTATIONS, HERBICIDE RESISTANCE, ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE, EVOLUTIONARY RESCUE, DRUG-RESISTANCE, FITNESS COSTS, SELECTION, POPULATIONS, MECHANISMS, COMPENSATION

ID: 270548760