Cooperative antibiotic response in coupled biofilm and planktonic E. faecalis communities
Fernandes Martins, G.; Guardiola-Flores, K. A.; Zaman, L.; Horowitz, J.; Hallinen, K. M.; Wood, K. B.
Show abstract
Bacterial communities grow as dynamic populations that respond to their environments. A clinically relevant example is the inactivation of beta-lactam antibiotics by intracellular beta-lactamase in E. faecalis resistant strains. In these populations, resistant bacteria act as antibiotic sinks, detoxifying the environment and allowing sensitive bacteria to survive treatment through a cooperative interaction. In this work, we study strongly coupled planktonic and biofilm populations of mixed sensitive-resistant E. faecalis bacteria under antibiotic stress using fluorescent microscopy. The presence of resistant bacteria in the system benefits both resistant and sensitive cells, leading to mixed planktonic and biofilm populations at super-inhibitory drug concentrations. We show that a beta-lactam antibiotic with or without the addition of a beta-lactam inhibitor can lead to a population inversion effect, characterized by a non-monotonic relation between initial and final fractions of resistant bacteria. The effect is observed in both the planktonic and biofilm populations and is modulated by the total initial cell density. A well-mixed model with competition mediated by resource sharing and cooperation from global degradation of toxins predicts the experimentally observed behavior. These observations suggest underlying population-level mechanisms that are largely independent of biofilm spatial structure.
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