Cell dormancy is a widespread mechanism used by bacteria to evade environmental threats including antibiotics. Here we monitored bacterial antibiotic tolerance and regrowth at the single-cell level and found that each individual survival cell shows different ‘dormancy depth’, which in return regulates the lag time for cell resuscitation after removal of antibiotic. We further established that protein aggresome - a collection of endogenous protein aggregates - is an important indicator of bacterial dormancy depth, whose formation is promoted by decreased cellular ATP level. For cells to leave the dormant state and resuscitate, clearance of protein aggresome and recovery of proteostasis are required. We revealed the ability to recruit functio...
Antibiotic persistence describes the presence of phenotypic variants within an isogenic bacterial po...
Bacterial populations produce phenotypic variants called persisters to survive harmful conditions. P...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
ABSTRACT Persisters are dormant variants that form a subpopulation of cells tolerant to antibiotics....
ABSTRACT Decades of research into bacterial persistence has been unable to fully characterize this a...
Transient antibiotic treatment typically eradicates most sensitive bacteria except a few survivors c...
When a bacterial population is treated with high concentrations of antibiotics, there is always a sm...
This is the final version. Available from the American Chemical Society via the DOI in this record. ...
All bacteria form persisters, cells that are multidrug tolerant and therefore able to survive antibi...
Bacteria are evolving strategies to survive antibiotic treatments at a pace that is not matched by ...
ABSTRACT Chronic bacterial infections are difficult to eradicate, though they are caused primarily b...
abstract: Bacteria have been shown to possess a large array of regulatory mechanisms to not just res...
Antibiotic persistence describes the presence of phenotypic variants within an isogenic bacterial po...
Biofilms are associated with a wide variety of bacterial infections and pose a serious problem in cl...
Dormancy is a protective state in which diverse pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria curtail metab...
Antibiotic persistence describes the presence of phenotypic variants within an isogenic bacterial po...
Bacterial populations produce phenotypic variants called persisters to survive harmful conditions. P...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
ABSTRACT Persisters are dormant variants that form a subpopulation of cells tolerant to antibiotics....
ABSTRACT Decades of research into bacterial persistence has been unable to fully characterize this a...
Transient antibiotic treatment typically eradicates most sensitive bacteria except a few survivors c...
When a bacterial population is treated with high concentrations of antibiotics, there is always a sm...
This is the final version. Available from the American Chemical Society via the DOI in this record. ...
All bacteria form persisters, cells that are multidrug tolerant and therefore able to survive antibi...
Bacteria are evolving strategies to survive antibiotic treatments at a pace that is not matched by ...
ABSTRACT Chronic bacterial infections are difficult to eradicate, though they are caused primarily b...
abstract: Bacteria have been shown to possess a large array of regulatory mechanisms to not just res...
Antibiotic persistence describes the presence of phenotypic variants within an isogenic bacterial po...
Biofilms are associated with a wide variety of bacterial infections and pose a serious problem in cl...
Dormancy is a protective state in which diverse pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria curtail metab...
Antibiotic persistence describes the presence of phenotypic variants within an isogenic bacterial po...
Bacterial populations produce phenotypic variants called persisters to survive harmful conditions. P...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...