NPJ Antimicrob Resist
December 2024
The acquisition of antibiotic resistance in bacteria, though a deeply concerning international issue, is reasonably well-understood at a mechanistic level. Less well-understood is why bacteria that are sensitive in vitro to well-established and widely-used antibiotics sometimes fail to respond to these agents in vivo. This is a particularly common problem in chronic, polymicrobial infection scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this opinion piece, we consider the meaning of the term 'wild type' in the context of microbiology. This is especially pertinent in the post-genomic era, where we have a greater awareness of species diversity than ever before. Genomic heterogeneity, evolution/selection pressures, definition of 'the wild', the size and importance of the pan-genome, gene-gene interactions (epistasis), and the nature of the 'wild-type gene' are all discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver the last two centuries, great advances have been made in microbiology as a discipline. Much of this progress has come about as a consequence of studying the growth and physiology of individual microbial species in well-defined laboratory media; so-called "axenic growth". However, in the real world, microbes rarely live in such "splendid isolation" (to paraphrase Foster) and more often-than-not, share the niche with a plethora of co-habitants.
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