Authors
Jacob D Palmer, Kevin R Foster
Publication date
2022/9/20
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
119
Issue
38
Pages
e2205407119
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
A key property of many antibiotics is that they will kill or inhibit a diverse range of microbial species. This broad-spectrum of activity has its evolutionary roots in ecological competition, whereby bacteria and other microbes use antibiotics to suppress other strains and species. However, many bacteria also use narrow-spectrum toxins, such as bacteriocins, that principally target conspecifics. Why has such a diversity in spectrum evolved? Here, we develop an evolutionary model to understand antimicrobial spectrum. Our first model recapitulates the intuition that broad-spectrum is best, because it enables a microbe to kill a wider diversity of competitors. However, this model neglects an important property of antimicrobials: They are commonly bound, sequestered, or degraded by the cells they target. Incorporating this toxin loss reveals a major advantage to narrow-spectrum toxins: They target the strongest ecological …
Total citations
202220232024376
Scholar articles
JD Palmer, KR Foster - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022