Reaction Kinetic Models of Antibiotic Heteroresistance
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15963Date
2019-08-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Bacterial heteroresistance (i.e., the co-existence of several subpopulations with different
antibiotic susceptibilities) can delay the clearance of bacteria even with long antibiotic exposure.
Some proposed mechanisms have been successfully described with mathematical models of
drug-target binding where the mechanism’s downstream of drug-target binding are not explicitly
modeled and subsumed in an empirical function, connecting target occupancy to antibiotic action.
However, with current approaches it is difficult to model mechanisms that involve multi-step reactions
that lead to bacterial killing. Here, we have a dual aim: first, to establish pharmacodynamic models
that include multi-step reaction pathways, and second, to model heteroresistance and investigate
which molecular heterogeneities can lead to delayed bacterial killing. We show that simulations
based on Gillespie algorithms, which have been employed to model reaction kinetics for decades,
can be useful tools to model antibiotic action via multi-step reactions. We highlight the strengths
and weaknesses of current models and Gillespie simulations. Finally, we show that in our models,
slight normally distributed variances in the rates of any event leading to bacterial death can (depending
on parameter choices) lead to delayed bacterial killing (i.e., heteroresistance). This means that a slowly
declining residual bacterial population due to heteroresistance is most likely the default scenario and
should be taken into account when planning treatment length.