# Understanding the genetic, evolutionary, and ecological interactions between drug resistance and phage resistance

> **NIH NIH R21** · YALE UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $199,301

## Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract
Bacterial pathogens are increasingly evolving drug resistance under natural selection from antibiotics in
medicine, agriculture, and nature. Meanwhile, bacteria ubiquitously encounter bacteriophages and rapidly
evolve phage resistance. However, the role of phages in driving drug resistance and sensitivity remains unclear.
Phage selection can specifically interact with antibiotic selection in complex ways. For instance, the evolution of
bacterial resistance to some phages increases resistance to antibiotics. On the other hand, some phages force
bacteria into evolutionary tradeoffs between phage and antibiotic resistance. We have previously shown that
phage which force such tradeoffs can drive the evolution of restored drug sensitivity in bacteria through the
alteration of phage-targeted antibiotic efflux pumps. However, there are many non-efflux pump genes associated
with drug resistance. For instance, Escherichia coli has 283 genes associated with drug resistance, only three of
which are characterized efflux-related genes. It is unknown how phages interact with uncharacterized cryptic
drug resistance-associated genes and the conditions where selection by phages that use drug-associated genes
may restore drug sensitivity. To better understand the interactions of phage and antibiotic resistance, we will
identify phages that use cryptic drug resistance genes and, importantly, we will identify conditions in which
phage selection drives the evolution of increased drug sensitivity. Extending our previous work into a study
system with excellent genetic tools, we will use microbiological, evolutionary, and molecular approaches to
characterize interactions between our collection of phages and drug resistance associated genes in E. coli. This
work focuses on the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms not addressed in previous studies. We will screen
our E. coli phage collection (33 phages) against a collection of 283 E. coli gene knockouts to identify phages that
specifically rely on drug-resistance-associated alleles. We will then test how microbial community dynamics are
influenced by phages and in turn alter the evolution of antibiotic resistance, characterizing general and drug-
related evolutionary tradeoffs in communities of increasing complexity. Finally, we will analyze drug-resistance-
targeting phage through life cycle characterization and whole genome sequencing and annotation, generating
well-characterized phages for future study. This proposal leverages existing molecular biology knowledge of E.
coli to survey every gene associated with drug resistance and determine whether phages interact with those genes
and how phage selection alters the evolution of drug sensitivity. Within microbial evolutionary biology, this
project will reveal how microbial communities mediate and alter evolutionary tradeoffs. More broadly for
medical microbiology, this work will uncover relationships between drug resistance and phage resistance...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9850536
- **Project number:** 5R21AI144345-02
- **Recipient organization:** YALE UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Alita Burmeister
- **Activity code:** R21 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $199,301
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-01-16 → 2022-12-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9850536

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9850536, Understanding the genetic, evolutionary, and ecological interactions between drug resistance and phage resistance (5R21AI144345-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-06-11 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9850536. Licensed CC0.

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