SummaryPersistence refers to the phenomenon in which isogenic populations of antibiotic-sensitive bacteria produce rare cells that transiently become multidrug tolerant. Whether slow growth in a rare subset of cells underlies the persistence phenotype has not be examined in wild-type bacteria. Here, we show that an exponentially growing population of wild-type Escherichia coli cells produces rare cells that stochastically switch into slow growth, that the slow-growing cells are multidrug tolerant, and that they are able to resuscitate. The persistence phenotype depends hierarchically on the signaling nucleotide (p)ppGpp, Lon protease, inorganic polyphosphate, and toxin-antitoxins. We show that the level of (p)ppGpp varies stochastically in ...
ABSTRACT Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clon...
Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clonal bacter...
Persistence is a phenomenon whereby a subpopulation of bacterial cells enters a transient growth-arr...
SummaryPersistence refers to the phenomenon in which isogenic populations of antibiotic-sensitive ba...
Transient antibiotic treatment typically eradicates most sensitive bacteria except a few survivors c...
All bacteria form persisters, cells that are multidrug tolerant and therefore able to survive antibi...
Persisters are drug-tolerant bacteria that account for the majority of bacterial infections. They ar...
Within bacterial populations, a small fraction of persister cells is transiently capable of survivin...
Within bacterial populations, a small fraction of persister cells is transiently capable of survivin...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
ABSTRACT Bacterial persisters are phenotypic variants that survive antibiotic treatment in a dormant...
Persisters are dormant variants that form a subpopulation of cells tolerant to antibiotics. Persiste...
One of the most challenging problems in microbiology is to understand how a small fraction of microb...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
In nearly all bacterial species examined so far, amino acid starvation triggers the rapid accumulati...
ABSTRACT Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clon...
Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clonal bacter...
Persistence is a phenomenon whereby a subpopulation of bacterial cells enters a transient growth-arr...
SummaryPersistence refers to the phenomenon in which isogenic populations of antibiotic-sensitive ba...
Transient antibiotic treatment typically eradicates most sensitive bacteria except a few survivors c...
All bacteria form persisters, cells that are multidrug tolerant and therefore able to survive antibi...
Persisters are drug-tolerant bacteria that account for the majority of bacterial infections. They ar...
Within bacterial populations, a small fraction of persister cells is transiently capable of survivin...
Within bacterial populations, a small fraction of persister cells is transiently capable of survivin...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
ABSTRACT Bacterial persisters are phenotypic variants that survive antibiotic treatment in a dormant...
Persisters are dormant variants that form a subpopulation of cells tolerant to antibiotics. Persiste...
One of the most challenging problems in microbiology is to understand how a small fraction of microb...
Upon encountering the sudden, lethal activity of antibiotics, survival of a bacterial population lar...
In nearly all bacterial species examined so far, amino acid starvation triggers the rapid accumulati...
ABSTRACT Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clon...
Persistence is a reversible and low-frequency phenomenon allowing a subpopulation of a clonal bacter...
Persistence is a phenomenon whereby a subpopulation of bacterial cells enters a transient growth-arr...