Abstract
Abstract The antibiotic resistance crisis, fueled by misuse and bacterial evolution, is a major global health threat. Traditional perspectives tie resistance to drug target mechanisms, viewing antibiotics as mere growth inhibitors. New insights revealed that low-dose antibiotics may also serve as signals, unexpectedly promoting bacterial growth. Yet, the development of resistance under these conditions remains unknown. Our study investigated resistance evolution under stimulatory antibiotics and uncovered new genetic mechanisms of resistance linked to metabolic remodeling. We documented a shift from a fast, reversible mechanism driven by methylation in central metabolic pathways to a slower, stable mechanism involving mutations in key metabolic genes. Both mechanisms contribute to a metabolic profile transition from glycolysis to rapid gluconeogenesis. In addition, our findings demonstrated that rising environmental temperatures associated with metabolic evolution accelerated this process, increasing the prevalence of metabolic gene mutations, albeit with a trade-off in interspecific fitness. These findings expand beyond the conventional understanding of resistance mechanisms, proposing a broader metabolic mechanism within the selective window of stimulatory sub-MIC antibiotics, particularly in the context of climate change.
Published Version
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