Multidrug Resistance (MDR) and Collateral Sensitivity in Bacteria, with Special Attention
to Genetic and Evolutionary Aspects and to the Perspectives of Antimicrobial Peptides—A
Review
Antibiotic poly-resistance (multidrug-, extreme-, and pan-drug resistance) is controlled
by adaptive evolution. Darwinian and Lamarckian interpretations of resistance evolution
are discussed. Arguments for, and against, pessimistic forecasts on a fatal “post-antibiotic
era” are evaluated. In commensal niches, the appearance of a new antibiotic resistance
often reduces fitness, but compensatory mutations may counteract this tendency. The
appearance of new antibiotic resistance is frequently accompanied by a collateral
sensitivity to other resistances. Organisms with an expanding open pan-genome, such
as Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, can
withstand an increased number of resistances by exploiting their evolutionary plasticity
and disseminating clonally or poly-clonally. Multidrug-resistant pathogen clones can
become predominant under antibiotic stress conditions but, under the influence of
negative frequency-dependent selection, are prevented from rising to dominance in
a population in a commensal niche. Antimicrobial peptides have a great potential to
combat multidrug resistance, since antibiotic-resistant bacteria have shown a high
frequency of collateral sensitivity to antimicrobial peptides. In addition, the mobility
patterns of antibiotic resistance, and antimicrobial peptide resistance, genes are
completely different. The integron trade in commensal niches is fortunately limited
by the species-specificity of resistance genes. Hence, we theorize that the suggested
post-antibiotic era has not yet come, and indeed might never come.