Abstract
AbstractPlasmids are key disseminators of antimicrobial resistance genes and virulence factors, and it is therefore critical to predict and reduce plasmid spread within microbial communities. The cost of plasmid carriage is a key metric that can be used to predict plasmids’ ecological fate, and it is unclear whether plasmid costs are affected by growth partners in a microbial community. We carried out competition experiments and tracked plasmid maintenance using a synthetic and stable 5-species community and a broad host-range plasmid as a model. We report that both the cost of plasmid carriage and its long-term maintenance in a focal strain depended on the presence of competitors, and that these interactions were species-specific. Addition of growth partners increased the plasmid cost to a focal strain, and accordingly plasmid loss from the focal species occurred over a shorter time frame in these species combinations. We propose that the destabilising effect of interspecific competition on plasmid maintenance may be leveraged in clinical and natural environments to cure plasmids from focal strains.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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