Subject Area

Biology

Description

Kathryn Mulvey ’23, Major: Biology

Caroline Zielinski ’23, Major: Biology

Faculty Mentor, Dr. Laura Williams, Biology

Predatory bacteria hunt and kill other bacteria, including pathogens that cause disease in humans, which makes them a promising alternative for treating antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections. Currently, it is unknown whether and how pathogens evolve resistance to predation. To investigate this, we are studying interactions between E. coli, which is a model organism for pathogenic bacteria, and predatory Bdellovibrio. When we co-cultured E. coli with a particular strain of predatory Bdellovibrio, we observed the emergence of predation-resistant E. coli that had reduced susceptibility to killing by Bdellovibrio. This demonstrates that changes in susceptibility to predation are possible. We hypothesize that proteins on the surface of E. coli are involved in this phenotypic change. To test our hypothesis, we are measuring the expression of two E. coli surface protein genes. Our work contributes to defining the mechanisms governing susceptibility of pathogens to predatory bacteria, and it will help inform development of predatory bacteria as a biocontrol strategy for drug-resistant infections.

Publisher

Providence College

Date

4-27-2023

Type

Poster

Format

Text

.pdf

Language

English

Included in

Biology Commons

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