E. coli cells with flourescents (Image: Pakpoom Subsoontorn via Wikimedia Commons)

Long before bacteria had to contend with antibiotic drugs, they had to survive extreme temperatures as Earth warmed and cooled over millennia. Could the adaptations they evolved to temperature — especially heat — help explain why certain strains are resistant to certain drugs? A new study by a research team at the University of California-Los Angeles that includes SFI External Professors Pamela Yeh and Van Savage suggests that defenses against extreme temperatures, do, indeed, give E. coli bacteria an advantage in fending off certain drugs. 

“Our code name for this paper was ‘temperature as drugs.’ Because we found that different temperatures had to act as a stressor just as a drug acts as a stressor to a bacterial population,” says Yeh. “So it came from a real basic question: Do drugs affect bacteria in some of the same ways that temperature affects bacteria?” 

It turns out that the same mechanisms E. coli evolved to deal with temperature endowed it with a built-in defense against drugs. But this advantage only goes so far: while heat-tolerant bacteria may be better able to resist drugs that stress bacteria in the same way high temperatures do, that also makes them more sensitive to drugs that mimic the effect of cold.

The work could help doctors administer antibiotics in a more precise way. 

“I think it’s an interesting first step, because if we think about how we treat a patient with an infection, depending on where it is, your body has different temperatures at different locations,” says Tina Manzhu Kang, a first co-author of the study. “We found some antibiotics work better with lower temperatures. So that’s something you might want to consider when deciding on a treatment.”

The team is now looking at how other stressors may have affected E. coli. “There have been a number of other stressors that have been there since the beginning of life, such as pressure. We think the bacteria may have also adapted its resistance to help deal with more recent forms of stress, like antibiotics,” says Mauricio Cruz-Loya, the paper's other first co-author.

Read the paper, "Stressor interaction networks suggest antibiotic resistance co-opted from stress response to temperature," in The ISME Journal (August 31, 2018)