Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3RB, United Kingdom.
Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3QU, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Sep 20;119(38):e2205407119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2205407119. Epub 2022 Sep 13.
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 commonly bound, sequestered, or degraded by the cells they target. Incorporating this toxin loss reveals a major advantage to narrow-spectrum toxins: They target the strongest ecological competitor and avoid being used up on less important species. Why then would broad-spectrum toxins ever evolve? Our model predicts that broad-spectrum toxins will be favored by natural selection if a strain is highly abundant and can overpower both its key competitor and other species. We test this prediction by compiling and analyzing a database of the regulation and spectrum of toxins used in inter-bacterial competition. This analysis reveals a strong association between broad-spectrum toxins and density-dependent regulation, indicating that they are indeed used when strains are abundant. Our work provides a rationale for why bacteria commonly evolve narrow-spectrum toxins such as bacteriocins and suggests that the evolution of antibiotics proper is a signature of ecological dominance.
许多抗生素的一个关键特性是,它们能够杀死或抑制多种微生物物种。这种广谱活性在进化上源于生态竞争,在这种竞争中,细菌和其他微生物利用抗生素来抑制其他菌株和物种。然而,许多细菌也利用窄谱毒素,如细菌素,主要针对同种生物。为什么会进化出如此多样化的光谱呢?在这里,我们开发了一种进化模型来理解抗菌光谱。我们的第一个模型概括了广谱性最好的直觉,因为它使微生物能够杀死更广泛的竞争物种。然而,这个模型忽略了抗生素的一个重要特性:它们通常被它们所针对的细胞结合、隔离或降解。纳入这种毒素损失揭示了窄谱毒素的一个主要优势:它们针对最强的生态竞争者,并避免被不重要的物种消耗掉。那么,广谱毒素为什么会进化呢?我们的模型预测,如果一个菌株数量非常多并且能够超越其关键竞争者和其他物种,那么自然选择就会有利于广谱毒素。我们通过编译和分析细菌间竞争中使用的毒素的调控和光谱数据库来检验这一预测。这项分析揭示了广谱毒素与密度依赖调控之间的强烈关联,表明当菌株丰富时确实会使用它们。我们的工作为为什么细菌通常会进化出窄谱毒素(如细菌素)提供了一个理由,并表明抗生素的进化是生态优势的一个特征。