Abstract

With antibiotic resistance rates on the rise, it is critical to understand how microbial species interactions influence the evolution of resistance. In obligate mutualisms, the survival of any one species (regardless of its intrinsic resistance) is contingent on the resistance of its cross-feeding partners. This sets the community antibiotic sensitivity at that of the ‘weakest link’ species. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that weakest link dynamics in an obligate cross-feeding relationship would limit the extent and mechanisms of antibiotic resistance evolution. We experimentally evolved an obligate co-culture and monoculture controls along gradients of two different antibiotics. We measured the rate at which each treatment increased antibiotic resistance, and sequenced terminal populations to question whether mutations differed between mono- and co-cultures. In both rifampicin and ampicillin treatments, we observed that resistance evolved more slowly in obligate co-cultures of E. coli and S. enterica than in monocultures. While we observed similar mechanisms of resistance arising under rifampicin selection, under ampicillin selection different resistance mechanisms arose in co-cultures and monocultures. In particular, mutations in an essential cell division protein, ftsI, arose in S. enterica only in co-culture. A simple mathematical model demonstrated that reliance on a partner is sufficient to slow the rate of adaptation, and can change the distribution of adaptive mutations that are acquired. Our results demonstrate that cooperative metabolic interactions can be an important modulator of resistance evolution in microbial communities.

Highlights

  • The ability of pathogens to rapidly evolve antibiotic resistance is a pressing global challenge

  • Antibiotic resistance in monoculture did not predict the sensitivity in co-culture, as the sensitivity was limited by the dependence on the least resistant species

  • Each culture was distributed along an antibiotic gradient of either ampicillin or rifampicin, with cells initially inoculated into each antibiotic concentration along the gradient

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Summary

Introduction

The ability of pathogens to rapidly evolve antibiotic resistance is a pressing global challenge. We have previously shown that obligate cross-feeding influences the effect of antibiotics over short time scales (i.e. within a single growth curve): the least resistant member of an obligate cross-feeding community constrains the ability of more resistant community members to grow at high antibiotic concentrations, producing “weakest-link” dynamics [18]. In this case, antibiotic resistance in monoculture (genetic mechanisms conferring an ability to grow at higher antibiotic concentrations) did not predict the sensitivity in co-culture (a phenotypic trait describing ability to grow at high antibiotic concentrations), as the sensitivity was limited by the dependence on the least resistant species. This idea has been demonstrated by others through modelling approaches [8]

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