Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Antibiotic" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Large scale laboratory evolution uncovers clinically relevant collateral antibiotic sensitivity Chowdhury FR; Banari V; Lesnic V; Zhanel GG; Findlay BL; 40615056
BIOLOGY
2 Global antibiotic hotspots and risks: A One Health assessment Yan B; Huang F; Ying J; Zhou D; Norouzi S; Zhang X; Wang B; Liu F; 40469481
CHEMBIOCHEM
3 De novo evolution of antibiotic resistance to Oct-TriA1 Chowdhury FR; Mercado LD; Kharitonov K; Findlay BL; 39832423
BIOLOGY
4 In silico molecular targets, docking, dynamics simulation and physiologically based pharmacokinetics modeling of oritavancin Fatoki TH; Balogun TC; Ojewuyi AE; Omole AC; Olukayode OV; Adewumi AP; Umesi AJ; Ijeoma NP; Apooyin AE; Chinedu CP; Idowu IE; Isah MJ; 39439008
CHEMBIOCHEM
5 Discovery of an adjuvant that resensitizes polymyxin B-resistant bacteria Mahdavi M; Findlay BL; 38096681
BIOLOGY
6 Fitness Costs of Antibiotic Resistance Impede the Evolution of Resistance to Other Antibiotics Chowdhury FR; Findlay BL; 37726252
BIOLOGY
7 A resistome survey across hundreds of freshwater bacterial communities reveals the impacts of veterinary and human antibiotics use Kraemer SA; Barbosa da Costa N; Oliva A; Huot Y; Walsh DA; 36338036
BIOLOGY
8 Sublethal Paraquat Confers Multidrug Tolerance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa by Inducing Superoxide Dismutase Activity and Lowering Envelope Permeability. Martins D, McKay GA, English AM, Nguyen D 33101252
CHEMBIOCHEM
9 Comprehensive evaluation of adsorption performances of carbonaceous materials for sulfonamide antibiotics removal. Luo B, Huang G, Yao Y, An C, Li W, Zheng R, Zhao K 32886308
CONCORDIA
10 Transcriptomic analysis suggests the inhibition of DNA damage repair in green alga Raphidocelis subcapitata exposed to roxithromycin. Guo J, Bai Y, Chen Z, Mo J, Li Q, Sun H, Zhang Q 32505758
CHEMISTRY
11 Effect and ameliorative mechanisms of polyoxometalates on the denitrification under sulfonamide antibiotics stress. Guo H, Chen Z, Lu C, Guo J, Li H, Song Y, Han Y, Hou Y 32145698
ENCS
12 Antibiotic Pollution in the Environment: From Microbial Ecology to Public Policy. Kraemer SA, Ramachandran A, Perron GG 31234491
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Large scale laboratory evolution uncovers clinically relevant collateral antibiotic sensitivity
Authors:Chowdhury FRBanari VLesnic VZhanel GGFindlay BL
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40615056/
DOI:10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2025.107564
Publication:International journal of antimicrobial agents
Keywords:Antibiotic resistanceadaptive laboratory evolutioncollateral sensitivity
PMID:40615056 Category: Date Added:2025-07-05
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada, H4B 1R6.
2 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada, H4B 1R6.
3 Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, R3T 2N2.
4 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada, H4B 1R6; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada, H4B 1R6. Electronic address: brandon.findlay@concordia.ca.

Description:

The increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance is a critical challenge, necessitating the development of strategies to mitigate the evolution of resistance. Collateral sensitivity (CS)-based sequential therapies have been proposed to mitigate resistance evolution. However, the evolutionary repeatability of CS across different experimental conditions and its clinical relevance remain underexplored, hindering its potential for translation into clinical practice. Here, we evolve 20-24 lineages of E. coli against tigecycline (TIG) and piperacillin (PIP), antibiotics suggested to produce CS, through three separate laboratory adaptive evolution (ALE) platforms to test for the robustness of CS interactions and the effect of the choice of ALE on CS evolution. We generate over 130 resistant mutants and 540 resistance and collateral sensitivity measurements to identify a CS relationship between TIG and polymyxin B (POL) that is highly repeatable across all the ALEs tested, suggesting that this CS interaction is preserved across different evolution microenvironments. We determine the mechanism of this novel CS by showing that cells resistant to TIG deactivate the Lon protease and overproduce negatively charged exopolysaccharides, which in turn attracts the polycationic POL and renders cells hypersensitive to the drug. We find that this CS relationship is present in a clinical dataset of over 750 uropathogenic MDR E. coli isolates, and show that the soft agar gradient evolution (SAGE) platform best predicts collateral effects (CS, neutrality or cross resistance) in this dataset. Our study provides a framework for identifying robust CS with clinical implications that can reduce the emergence of resistance to our existing antibiotics.





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