Affiliation:
1. U.S. Salinity Lab, ARS, USDA, Riverside, California, USA
Abstract
There has been growing interest in horizontal gene transfer of antibiotic resistance plasmids as the antibiotic resistance crisis has worsened over the years. Most studies examining conjugation of bacterial plasmids focus on growing cultures of bacteria for short periods, but in the environment, most bacteria grow episodically and at much lower rates than in the laboratory. We examined conjugation of an IncFII antibiotic resistance plasmid in
E. coli
under growing and nongrowing conditions to understand the dynamics of conjugation under which the plasmid is transferred. We found that conjugation occurs in a narrow time frame when
E. coli
is transitioning from a growing to nongrowing phase and that the conjugation plateau develops because of a lack of capable donor cells in growing cultures. From an environmental aspect, our results suggest that episodic growth in nutrient-depleted environments could result in more conjugation than sustained growth in a nutrient rich environment.
Funder
USDA | Agricultural Research Service
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
14 articles.
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