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Macrophage adaptation leads to parallel evolution of genetically diverse Escherichia coli small‐colony variants with increased fitness in vivo and antibiotic collateral sensitivity
Author(s) -
Ramiro Ricardo S.,
Costa Henrique,
Gordo Isabel
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
evolutionary applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 68
ISSN - 1752-4571
DOI - 10.1111/eva.12397
Subject(s) - biology , experimental evolution , tetracycline , escherichia coli , kanamycin , adaptation (eye) , antibiotics , aminoglycoside , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , antibiotic resistance , gene , neuroscience
Small‐colony variants ( SCV s) are commonly observed in evolution experiments and clinical isolates, being associated with antibiotic resistance and persistent infections. We recently observed the repeated emergence of Escherichia coli SCV s during adaptation to the interaction with macrophages. To identify the genetic targets underlying the emergence of this clinically relevant morphotype, we performed whole‐genome sequencing of independently evolved SCV clones. We uncovered novel mutational targets, not previously associated with SCV s (e.g. cydA , pepP ) and observed widespread functional parallelism. All SCV clones had mutations in genes related to the electron‐transport chain. As SCV s emerged during adaptation to macrophages, and often show increased antibiotic resistance, we measured SCV fitness inside macrophages and measured their antibiotic resistance profiles. SCV s had a fitness advantage inside macrophages and showed increased aminoglycoside resistance in vitro, but had collateral sensitivity to other antibiotics (e.g. tetracycline). Importantly, we observed similar results in vivo. SCV s had a fitness advantage upon colonization of the mouse gut, which could be tuned by antibiotic treatment: kanamycin (aminoglycoside) increased SCV fitness, but tetracycline strongly reduced it. Our results highlight the power of using experimental evolution as the basis for identifying the causes and consequences of adaptation during host‐microbe interactions.

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