International audienceExposure to antibiotics induces the expression of mutagenic bacterial stress–response pathways, but the evolutionary benefits of these responses remain unclear. One possibility is that stress–response pathways provide a short-term advantage by protecting bacteria against the toxic effects of antibiotics. Second, it is possible that stress-induced mutagenesis provides a long-term advantage by accelerating the evolution of resistance. Here, we directly measure the contribution of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa SOS pathway to bacterial fitness and evolvability in the presence of sublethal doses of ciprofloxacin. Using short-term competition experiments, we demonstrate that the SOS pathway increases competitive fitness in the ...
<div><p>Mutator strains are expected to evolve when the availability and effect of beneficial mutati...
Suppression of the SOS response has been postulated as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating antim...
International audienceThe presence of an abnormal amount of single-stranded DNA in the bacterial cel...
International audienceExposure to antibiotics induces the expression of mutagenic bacterial stress–r...
Exposure to antibiotics induces the expression of mutagenic bacterial stress–response pathways, but ...
Suppression of the SOS response has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating quinolo...
International audienceAbstract Stress is thought to increase mutation rate and thus to accelerate ev...
Beneficial mutations are the fuel for adaptation but remain poorly studied. Extreme value theory has...
ABSTRACT The bacterial SOS response is a DNA damage repair network that is strongly implicated in bo...
Because adaptation depends upon the fixation of novel beneficial mutations, the fitness effects of b...
Bacteria produce persisters, a small subpopulation of cells that neither grow nor die in the presenc...
Evolution is at the core of the impending antibiotic crisis. Sustainable therapy must thus account f...
Suppression of the SOS response has been postulated as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating antim...
Antibiotic resistance is a major threat to public health. Understanding how it evolves,\ud and the g...
Mutator strains are expected to evolve when the availability and effect of beneficial mutations are ...
<div><p>Mutator strains are expected to evolve when the availability and effect of beneficial mutati...
Suppression of the SOS response has been postulated as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating antim...
International audienceThe presence of an abnormal amount of single-stranded DNA in the bacterial cel...
International audienceExposure to antibiotics induces the expression of mutagenic bacterial stress–r...
Exposure to antibiotics induces the expression of mutagenic bacterial stress–response pathways, but ...
Suppression of the SOS response has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating quinolo...
International audienceAbstract Stress is thought to increase mutation rate and thus to accelerate ev...
Beneficial mutations are the fuel for adaptation but remain poorly studied. Extreme value theory has...
ABSTRACT The bacterial SOS response is a DNA damage repair network that is strongly implicated in bo...
Because adaptation depends upon the fixation of novel beneficial mutations, the fitness effects of b...
Bacteria produce persisters, a small subpopulation of cells that neither grow nor die in the presenc...
Evolution is at the core of the impending antibiotic crisis. Sustainable therapy must thus account f...
Suppression of the SOS response has been postulated as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating antim...
Antibiotic resistance is a major threat to public health. Understanding how it evolves,\ud and the g...
Mutator strains are expected to evolve when the availability and effect of beneficial mutations are ...
<div><p>Mutator strains are expected to evolve when the availability and effect of beneficial mutati...
Suppression of the SOS response has been postulated as a therapeutic strategy for potentiating antim...
International audienceThe presence of an abnormal amount of single-stranded DNA in the bacterial cel...