Lindsay Sonnenkalb, Barbora Trubenová, Roland R Regoes, Matthias Merker, Stefan Niemann
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Global health is threatened by the rise of antibiotic resistance. Bacteria of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (Mtbc) are a major contributor to this antibiotic crisis, with about 450,000 new multidrug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) cases per year. This study investigates resistance evolution, through defining the resistance mutant selection window (MSW) for the important MDR-TB treatment drugs moxifloxacin and bedaquiline. We employed a combination of long-term in vitro experiments supplemented with mathematical modelling that combined pharmacodynamics with population genetics. We assessed resistance selection at concentrations below the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC), the MSW and fitness cost of eight mutant clones with different resistance-associated variants. Both computational and experimental results show that mutant clone populations are selected far below the MIC, leading to a major growth advantage of resistant populations under weak selection pressure. An eighth of the MIC was enough to enrich mutant clone populations in the short term (five bacterial passages or 20 generations), even in mutant clones with a major competitive fitness loss. In fact, gyrA, gyrB and most Rv0678 mutations have virtually no effect on the bacteria's competitive fitness in vitro. This work highlights the risk, how ineffective drug delivery and dosing can lead to resistance emergence.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Infection publishes original papers on all aspects of infection - clinical, microbiological and epidemiological. The Journal seeks to bring together knowledge from all specialties involved in infection research and clinical practice, and present the best work in the ever-changing field of infection.
Each issue brings you Editorials that describe current or controversial topics of interest, high quality Reviews to keep you in touch with the latest developments in specific fields of interest, an Epidemiology section reporting studies in the hospital and the general community, and a lively correspondence section.