In vitro and in vivo reduced fitness and virulence in ciprofloxacin-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.

Y Smani, R López-Rojas, J Domínguez-Herrera, F Docobo-Pérez, S Martí, J Vila, J Pachón
Author Information
  1. Y Smani: Clinic Unit of Infectious Diseases, Microbiology and Preventive Medicine, Institute of Biomedicine of Seville, University Hospital Virgen del Rocío/CSIC/University of Seville, Seville, Spain. ysmani-ibis@us.es; y_smani@hotmail.com

Abstract

Limited data on relative fitness and virulence of antimicrobial-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii are known. We aimed to study the virulence and fitness cost of ciprofloxacin-resistance in A. baumannii (CipR) compared with the susceptible parental wild-type strain (CipS). Human lung epithelial cells were infected with CipS and CipR for 24 h. Competition fitness was monitored in vitro and in vivo in a murine peritoneal sepsis model. We showed that CipR induced less cell death than CipS and CipR growth was slow when in competition with CipS. Altogether, acquisition of ciprofloxacin resistance confers a biological fitness cost and reduces virulence in A. baumannii.

MeSH Term

Acinetobacter baumannii
Animals
Anti-Infective Agents
Biological Transport, Active
Cell Line
Cell Survival
Ciprofloxacin
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
Epithelial Cells
Humans
Mice
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Peritoneum
Sepsis
Virulence

Chemicals

Anti-Infective Agents
Ciprofloxacin

Word Cloud

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