Selective advantage of resistant strains at trace levels of antibiotics : a simple and ultrasensitive color test for detection of antibiotics and genotoxic agents

Anne Liu, Amie Fong, Elinne Becket, Jessica Yuan, Cindy Tamae, Leah Medrano, Maria Maiz, Christine Wahba, Catherine Lee, Kim Lee, Katherine P. Tran, Hanjing Yang, Robert M. Hoffman, Anya Salih, Jeffrey H. Miller

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Many studies have examined the evolution of bacterial mutants that are resistant to specific antibiotics, and many of these focus on concentrations at and above the MIC. Here we ask for the minimum concentration at which existing resistant mutants can outgrow sensitive wild-type strains in competition experiments at antibiotic levels significantly below the MIC, and we define a minimum selective concentration (MSC) in Escherichia coli for two antibiotics, which is near 1/5 of the MIC for ciprofloxacin and 1/20 of the MIC for tetracycline. Because of the prevalence of resistant mutants already in the human microbiome, allowable levels of antibiotics to which we are exposed should be below the MSC. Since this concentration often corresponds to low or trace levels of antibiotics, it is helpful to have simple tests to detect such trace levels. We describe a simple ultrasensitive test for detecting the presence of antibiotics and genotoxic agents. The test is based on the use of chromogenic proteins as color markers and the use of single and multiple mutants of Escherichia coli that have greatly increased sensitivity to either a wide range of antibiotics or specific antibiotics, antibiotic families, and genotoxic agents. This test can detect ciprofloxacin at 1/75 of the MIC.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1204-1210
    Number of pages7
    JournalAntimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
    Volume55
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

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