Evolutionary Instability of Collateral Susceptibility Networks in Ciprofloxacin-Resistant Clinical Escherichia coli Strains
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27550Date
2022-07-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Sørum, Vidar; Øynes, Emma Lu; Sollied Møller, Anna; Harms, Klaus; Samuelsen, Ørjan; Podnecky, Nicole L.; Johnsen, Pål JarleAbstract
IMPORTANCE Antimicrobial resistance occurs due to genetic alterations that affect different processes in bacteria. Thus, developing resistance toward one antimicrobial drug may also alter the response toward others (collateral effects). Understanding the mechanisms of such collateral effects may provide clinicians with a framework for informed antimicrobial treatment strategies, limiting the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. However, for clinical implementation, it is important that the collateral effects of resistance development are repeatable and temporarily stable. Here, we show that collateral effects caused by resistance development toward ciprofloxacin in clinical Escherichia coli strains are not temporarily stable because of compensatory mutations restoring the fitness burden of the initial resistance mutations. Consequently, this instability is complicating the general applicability and clinical implementation of collateral effects into treatment strategies.