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 comm...
Microbes live in dense communities where strains and species compete for space and nutrients. Cells ...
Bacteria produce a wide arsenal of toxic compounds in order to kill competing species. Bacteriocins,...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Evolutionary arms race plays a major role in shaping biological diversity. In microbial systems, com...
Bacteriocins are the most abundant and diverse defense systems in bacteria. As a result of the speci...
Bacteriocins, toxic peptides involved in the competition between bacterial strains, are extremely di...
Bacteriocins are an abundant class of antimicrobial molecules that appear to mediate population dyna...
Understanding the conditions that favour the evolution and maintenance of spiteful bacteriocin produ...
Abstract Bacteriocins are usually viewed as the effective weapons of bacterial killers. However, kil...
When competing for space and resources, bacteria produce toxins known as bacteriocins to gain an adv...
When competing for space and resources, bacteria produce toxins known as bacteriocins to gain an adv...
The bacteriocin family is the most abundant and diverse group of bacterial defenses. Key information...
Sub-minimum inhibiting concentrations (sub-MICs) of antibiotics frequently occur in natural environm...
Antibiotics leak constantly into environments due to widespread use in agriculture and human therapy...
Microbes live in dense communities where strains and species compete for space and nutrients. Cells ...
Bacteria produce a wide arsenal of toxic compounds in order to kill competing species. Bacteriocins,...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Evolutionary arms race plays a major role in shaping biological diversity. In microbial systems, com...
Bacteriocins are the most abundant and diverse defense systems in bacteria. As a result of the speci...
Bacteriocins, toxic peptides involved in the competition between bacterial strains, are extremely di...
Bacteriocins are an abundant class of antimicrobial molecules that appear to mediate population dyna...
Understanding the conditions that favour the evolution and maintenance of spiteful bacteriocin produ...
Abstract Bacteriocins are usually viewed as the effective weapons of bacterial killers. However, kil...
When competing for space and resources, bacteria produce toxins known as bacteriocins to gain an adv...
When competing for space and resources, bacteria produce toxins known as bacteriocins to gain an adv...
The bacteriocin family is the most abundant and diverse group of bacterial defenses. Key information...
Sub-minimum inhibiting concentrations (sub-MICs) of antibiotics frequently occur in natural environm...
Antibiotics leak constantly into environments due to widespread use in agriculture and human therapy...
Microbes live in dense communities where strains and species compete for space and nutrients. Cells ...
Bacteria produce a wide arsenal of toxic compounds in order to kill competing species. Bacteriocins,...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...