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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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Urban wastewater treatment plants as hotspots for the release of antibiotics in the environment: a review

TL;DR: The aim of the present paper is to critically review the fate and removal of various antibiotics in wastewater treatment, focusing on different processes (i.e. biological processes, advanced treatment technologies and disinfection) in view of the current concerns related to the induction of toxic effects in aquatic and terrestrial organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbiological effects of sublethal levels of antibiotics

TL;DR: The ecology of antibiotics and the ability of subinhibitory concentrations to select for bacterial resistance are discussed and the effects of low-level drug exposure on bacterial physiology are considered, including the generation of genetic and phenotypic variability, as well as the able of antibiotics to function as signalling molecules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biofilm-Related Infections: Bridging the Gap between Clinical Management and Fundamental Aspects of Recalcitrance toward Antibiotics

TL;DR: This review presents the current understanding of the molecular mechanisms of biofilm recalcitrance toward antibiotics and describes how recent progress has improved the capacity to design original and efficient strategies to prevent or eradicate biofilm-related infections.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interplay in the selection of fluoroquinolone resistance and bacterial fitness.

TL;DR: Data suggest that natural selection for improved growth in bacteria with low-level resistance to fluoroquinolones could in some cases select for further reductions in drug susceptibility, even in the absence of further exposure to the drug.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinical consequences of antimicrobial resistance.

TL;DR: The continued evolution of antimicrobial resistance in the hospital and more recently in the community threatens to seriously compromise the ability to treat serious infections and the lack of a robust pipeline of new agents, particularly against resistant Gram-negative bacteria, emphasizes the importance of optimizing the use of current antimicrobials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination and fate of oxytetracycline and related compounds in oxytetracycline production wastewater and the receiving river.

TL;DR: This study investigated the occurrence and fate of oxytetracycline (OTC) and its related substances, 4-epi-oxytetracyCline (EOTC), alpha-apo-oxytracy Cline (alpha-apo)-OTC, and beta-apo (beta-apo) in a wastewater treatment plant treating OTC production wastewater and a river receiving the effluent from the WWTP using liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spect
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of penicillin G and its degradation products in a penicillin production wastewater treatment plant and the receiving river

TL;DR: An analytical method was developed for the simultaneous detection of PEN G and five degradation products using liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC-ESI/MS), which revealed the fate of penicillin G in the wastewater from a P EN G production facility and the receiving river.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibiotic-Selective Environments

TL;DR: Analysis of selective environment-related antibiotic-host-bacteria interactions is essential to understanding the biology of antibiotic resistance.
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