Abstract

BackgroundThe complex relationship between drug concentrations and bacterial growth rates require not only the minimum inhibitory concentration but also other parameters to capture the dynamic nature of the relationship. To analyse this relationship between tetracycline concentration and growth of Escherichia coli representative of those found in the Danish pig population, we compared the growth of 50 randomly selected strains. The observed net growth rates were used to describe the in vitro pharmacodynamic relationship between drug concentration and net growth rate based on Emax model with three parameters: maximum net growth rate (αmax); concentration for a half-maximal response (Emax); and the Hill coefficient (γ).ResultsThe net growth rate in the absence of antibiotic did not differ between susceptible and resistant isolates (P = 0.97). The net growth rate decreased with increasing tetracycline concentrations, and this decline was greater in susceptible strains than resistant strains. The lag phase, defined as the time needed for the strain to reach an OD600 value of 0.01, increased exponentially with increasing tetracycline concentration. The pharmacodynamic parameters confirmed that the alpha_{max} between susceptible and resistant strains in the absence of a drug was not different. EC50 increased linearly with MIC on a log–log scale, and γ was different between susceptible and resistant strains.ConclusionsThe in vitro model parameters described the inhibition effect of tetracycline on E. coli when strains were exposed to a wide range of tetracycline concentrations. These parameters, along with in vivo pharmacokinetic data, may be useful in mathematical models to predict in vivo competitive growth of many different strains and for development of optimal dosing regimens for preventing selection of resistance.

Highlights

  • The complex relationship between drug concentrations and bacterial growth rates require the minimum inhibitory concentration and other parameters to capture the dynamic nature of the relationship

  • Antibiotic resistance patterns of the 50 randomly selected isolates had previously been determined as part of the Danish Integrated Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring and Research Programme 2010, only for tetracycline concentrations between 2 and 32 μg/ ml [22], and susceptibility towards this drug was examined in more detail in the current study

  • Growth response to different concentrations of tetracycline Growth curves of a single E. coli in triplicate at different concentrations of tetracycline are shown in Fig. 1, with an exponential model fit indicated by the solid lines

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Summary

Introduction

The complex relationship between drug concentrations and bacterial growth rates require the minimum inhibitory concentration and other parameters to capture the dynamic nature of the relationship. To analyse this relationship between tetracycline concentration and growth of Escherichia coli representative of those found in the Danish pig population, we compared the growth of 50 randomly selected strains. In Denmark, 36 % of commensal E. coli obtained from pigs were resistant to tetracycline, and efflux pumps TetA and TetB were found to encode for resistance in a subset of E. coli isolates from 2012 [2, 8]. Understanding the relation between tetracycline exposure and the growth response of porcine E. coli strains is important to aid in improving dosing strategies and possibly reduce the resistance problem

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