Autor: |
Igler C; Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland., Schwyter L; Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland., Gehrig D; Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland., Wendling CC; Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland. |
Abstrakt: |
Antibiotic resistance spread via plasmids is a serious threat to successfully fight infections and makes understanding plasmid transfer in nature crucial to prevent the rise of antibiotic resistance. Studies addressing the dynamics of plasmid conjugation have yet neglected one omnipresent factor: prophages (viruses integrated into bacterial genomes), whose activation can kill host and surrounding bacterial cells. To investigate the impact of prophages on conjugation, we combined experiments and mathematical modelling. Using Escherichia coli , prophage λ and the multidrug-resistant plasmid RP4 we find that prophages can substantially limit the spread of conjugative plasmids. This inhibitory effect was strongly dependent on environmental conditions and bacterial genetic background. Our empirically parameterized model reproduced experimental dynamics of cells acquiring either the prophage or the plasmid well but could only reproduce the number of cells acquiring both elements by assuming complex interactions between conjugative plasmids and prophages in sequential infections. Varying phage and plasmid infection parameters over empirically realistic ranges revealed that plasmids can overcome the negative impact of prophages through high conjugation rates. Overall, the presence of prophages introduces an additional death rate for plasmid carriers, the magnitude of which is determined in non-trivial ways by the environment, the phage and the plasmid. This article is part of the theme issue 'The secret lives of microbial mobile genetic elements'. |