Antibiotics have natural functions, mostly involving cell-to-cell signalling networks. The anthropogenic production of antibiotics, and its release in the microbiosphere results in a disturbance of these networks, antibiotic resistance tending to preserve its integrity. The cost of such adaptation is the emergence and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes, and of all genetic and cellular vehicles in which these genes are located. Selection of the combinations of the different evolutionary units (genes, integrons, transposons, plasmids, cells, communities and microbiomes, hosts) is highly asymmetrical. Each unit of selection is a self-interested entity, exploiting the higher hierarchical unit for its own benefit, but in doing so the h...
Antibiotic resistance at its core is a problem of evolutionary biology. Bacteria evolve resistance t...
The widespread use of antibiotics has markedly improved public health over the last 60 years. Howeve...
ABSTRACT Recent research has demonstrated that selection for antibiotic resistance occurs at very lo...
Antibiotics have natural functions, mostly involving cell-to-cell signaling networks. The anthropoge...
Antibiotic use is so ingrained in modern healthcare and agriculture that it can be difficult to imag...
Antibiotic resistance is one of the few examples of evolution that can be addressed experimentally. ...
antibiotic resistance; tetracyclines; macrolides; vancomycin; quinolones; phylogeny; reservoirs. A n...
Antibiotics and antibiotic resistance determinants, natural molecules closely related to bacterial p...
Despite efforts from a range of disciplines, our ability to predict and combat the evolution of anti...
Antibiotic resistance, one of the most pressing challenges facing public health today, arises when a...
Antibiotic resistance is a big problem worldwide. If we do not learn how to prevent resistance from ...
Scientific abstract Antibiotic resistance, especially in Gram-negative pathogens, represents a subst...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
The widespread use and abuse of antibiotic therapy has evolutionary and ecological consequences, som...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Antibiotic resistance at its core is a problem of evolutionary biology. Bacteria evolve resistance t...
The widespread use of antibiotics has markedly improved public health over the last 60 years. Howeve...
ABSTRACT Recent research has demonstrated that selection for antibiotic resistance occurs at very lo...
Antibiotics have natural functions, mostly involving cell-to-cell signaling networks. The anthropoge...
Antibiotic use is so ingrained in modern healthcare and agriculture that it can be difficult to imag...
Antibiotic resistance is one of the few examples of evolution that can be addressed experimentally. ...
antibiotic resistance; tetracyclines; macrolides; vancomycin; quinolones; phylogeny; reservoirs. A n...
Antibiotics and antibiotic resistance determinants, natural molecules closely related to bacterial p...
Despite efforts from a range of disciplines, our ability to predict and combat the evolution of anti...
Antibiotic resistance, one of the most pressing challenges facing public health today, arises when a...
Antibiotic resistance is a big problem worldwide. If we do not learn how to prevent resistance from ...
Scientific abstract Antibiotic resistance, especially in Gram-negative pathogens, represents a subst...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
The widespread use and abuse of antibiotic therapy has evolutionary and ecological consequences, som...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Antibiotic resistance at its core is a problem of evolutionary biology. Bacteria evolve resistance t...
The widespread use of antibiotics has markedly improved public health over the last 60 years. Howeve...
ABSTRACT Recent research has demonstrated that selection for antibiotic resistance occurs at very lo...