Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
Battling Resistance ■ 223

the human immune system. These proteins
could make it easier for staph and other bacte-
ria to grow in a wound because the host immune
system would be less able to fight them off.
The lack of the antibiotic genes and the pres-
ence of new genes create the ideal conditions for
a mixed infection, in which different species of
pathogens mingle in a festering soup of contam-
ination. Mixed infections are breeding grounds
for antibiotic resistance because they are sites
of gene flow among different organisms. In this
explanation, the CC5 staph evolved via the three
usual mechanisms—mutation, natural selec-
tion, and gene flow (via horizontal transfer)—to
be more susceptible to take up the vancomycin-
resistance allele from Enterococcus.
In addition to natural selection (and its
intriguing permutation called sexual selection;
see “Sex and Selection”), mutation, and gene flow,

evolved to effectively pick up the allele for vanco-


mycin resistance.


First, all the vancomycin-resistant CC5


staph bacteria have the same mutation in a


gene called DprA. DprA appears to be involved


in preventing horizontal gene transfer. A muta-


tion in this gene might make it easier for the


staph to take up DNA from other bacteria, such


as Enterococcus.


Second, the CC5 strains lack a set of genes


that encode an antibiotic that kills other bacte-


ria. Perhaps this antibiotic normally kills Entero-


coccus near the staph, which would explain why


horizontal transfer between the two species does


not typically occur.


Finally, Gilmore and his team found that in


place of that missing set of antibiotic genes, the


vancomycin-resistant CC5 staph have a unique


cluster of genes encoding proteins that confuse


S


taphylococcus and other bacteria replicate asexually
by copying their DNA and dividing in two. But adding
sex to the equation complicates reproduction. Another
mechanism by which species evolve is called sexual
selection. In sexual selection, nature selects a trait that
increases an individual’s chance of mating—even if that
trait decreases the individual’s chance of survival.
Sexual selection favors individuals that are good at
getting mates, and it often helps explain differences
between males and females in size, courtship behavior,
and other traits. Species whose males and females are
distinctly different in appearance, such as peacocks,
lions, and ducks, are said to exhibit sexual dimorphism. In
many species, the members of one sex—often females—

are choosy about whether to mate. In birds, for example,
brightly colored males may perform elaborate displays
in their attempts to woo a mate. In other species, males
may attract attention by other means, such as calling
vigorously. Females then select as their mates the males
with the loudest calls.
Yet, some characteristics that increase an individual’s
chance of mating can decrease its chance of survival. For
example, male túngara frogs perform a complex mating call
that may or may not end in one or more “chucks.” Females
prefer to mate with males that emit chucks, but frog-eating
bats use that same sound to help them locate their prey.
As a result, a frog’s attempt to locate a mate can end in
disaster.

Sex and Selection


A male peacock
performs an elaborate
mating display to a
potential mate.

Male túngara frogs face an
ecological trade-off: the same type
of call that is most successful at
attracting females for mating also
attracts predatory bats to dinner.
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