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Spatiotemporal microbial evolution on antibiotic landscapes

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posted on 2025-08-01, 00:08 authored by M Baym, TD Lieberman, ED Kelsic, R Chait, R Gross, I Yelin, R Kishony
A key aspect of bacterial survival is the ability to evolve while migrating across spatially varying environmental challenges. Laboratory experiments, however, often study evolution in well-mixed systems. Here, we introduce an experimental device, the microbial evolution and growth arena (MEGA)-plate, in which bacteria spread and evolved on a large antibiotic landscape (120 × 60 centimeters) that allowed visual observation of mutation and selection in a migrating bacterial front.While resistance increased consistently, multiple coexisting lineages diversified both phenotypically and genotypically. Analyzing mutants at and behind the propagating front,we found that evolution is not always led by the most resistant mutants; highly resistant mutants may be trapped behindmore sensitive lineages.TheMEGA-plate provides a versatile platformfor studying microbial adaption and directly visualizing evolutionary dynamics.

Funding

281891

32 CFR 168a

European Union FP7

NIH

National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate fellowship

R01-GM081617

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© 2016, American Association for the Advancement of Science

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Association for the Advancement of Science via the DOI in this Data availability: Sequence data are available on NCBI SRA under accession number SRP077287

Journal

Science

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-01-09T15:56:05Z

FOA date

2020-01-09T15:58:21Z

Citation

Vol. 353 (6304), pp. 1147 - 1151

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