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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Selection of resistant bacteria at very low antibiotic concentrations.

TLDR
It is suggested that the low antibiotic concentrations found in many natural environments are important for enrichment and maintenance of resistance in bacterial populations.
Abstract
The widespread use of antibiotics is selecting for a variety of resistance mechanisms that seriously challenge our ability to treat bacterial infections. Resistant bacteria can be selected at the high concentrations of antibiotics used therapeutically, but what role the much lower antibiotic concentrations present in many environments plays in selection remains largely unclear. Here we show using highly sensitive competition experiments that selection of resistant bacteria occurs at extremely low antibiotic concentrations. Thus, for three clinically important antibiotics, drug concentrations up to several hundred-fold below the minimal inhibitory concentration of susceptible bacteria could enrich for resistant bacteria, even when present at a very low initial fraction. We also show that de novo mutants can be selected at sub-MIC concentrations of antibiotics, and we provide a mathematical model predicting how rapidly such mutants would take over in a susceptible population. These results add another dimension to the evolution of resistance and suggest that the low antibiotic concentrations found in many natural environments are important for enrichment and maintenance of resistance in bacterial populations.

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Mg-, Zn-, and Fe-Based Alloys With Antibacterial Properties as Orthopedic Implant Materials

TL;DR: This review summarizes the recent advances in biodegradable magnesium- (Mg-), iron- (Fe-), and zinc- (Zn-) based alloys with antibacterial properties as orthopedic implant materials.
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Influence of Sterilized Human Fecal Extract on the Sensitivity of Salmonella enterica ATCC 13076 and Listeria monocytogenes ATCC 15313 to Enrofloxacin

TL;DR: Fecal extract decreased the susceptibilities of S. enterica and L. monocytogenes to concentrations of enrofloxacin higher than the MIC and resulted in rapid resistance selection, which is concluded to be antimicrobial effects on bacteria under colonic conditions.
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Emerging issues and approaches to protecting and sustaining surface and groundwater resources: Emphasis on Ghana

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight approaches to protect and sustaining surface and groundwater resources by triangulating 199 literature sources and highlight contaminants of emerging concern (CEC) that require detailed research are antibiotics, microplastics, and perfluoroalkyl acids.
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Designing benign molecules: The influence of O-acetylated glucosamine-substituents on the environmental biodegradability of fluoroquinolones.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigate if the addition of sugar moieties could improve the overall environmental biodegradability of fluoroquinolones (FQs) by conjugating them with 1,3,4,6-Tetra-O-acetyl-β-d-glucosamine and 2-deoxy-dglucopyranose.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic Gene Expression in a Single Cell

TL;DR: This work constructed strains of Escherichia coli that enable detection of noise and discrimination between the two mechanisms by which it is generated and reveals how low intracellular copy numbers of molecules can fundamentally limit the precision of gene regulation.
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Antibiotics in the aquatic environment - A review - Part II

TL;DR: This review brings up important questions that are still open, and addresses some significant issues which must be tackled in the future for a better understanding of the behavior of antibiotics in the environment, as well as the risks associated with their occurrence.
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Heavy use of prophylactic antibiotics in aquaculture: a growing problem for human and animal health and for the environment

TL;DR: Global efforts are needed to promote more judicious use of prophylactic antibiotics in aquaculture as accumulating evidence indicates that unrestricted use is detrimental to fish, terrestrial animals, and human health and the environment.
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Antibiotic resistance and its cost: is it possible to reverse resistance?

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the fitness costs of resistance will allow susceptible bacteria to outcompete resistant bacteria if the selective pressure from antibiotics is reduced, and that the rate of reversibility will be slow at the community level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in natural environments.

TL;DR: The large majority of antibiotics currently used for treating infections and the antibiotic resistance genes acquired by human pathogens each have an environmental origin and the function of these elements in their environmental reservoirs may be very distinct from the “weapon-shield” role they play in clinical settings.
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