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Estimating the transfer rates of bacterial plasmids with an adapted Luria–Delbrück fluctuation analysis

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  • Olivia Kosterlitz
  • Adamaris Muñiz Tirado
  • Claire Wate
  • Clint Elg
  • Ivana Bozic
  • Eva M Top
  • Benjamin Kerr

Abstract

To increase our basic understanding of the ecology and evolution of conjugative plasmids, we need reliable estimates of their rate of transfer between bacterial cells. Current assays to measure transfer rate are based on deterministic modeling frameworks. However, some cell numbers in these assays can be very small, making estimates that rely on these numbers prone to noise. Here, we take a different approach to estimate plasmid transfer rate, which explicitly embraces this noise. Inspired by the classic fluctuation analysis of Luria and Delbrück, our method is grounded in a stochastic modeling framework. In addition to capturing the random nature of plasmid conjugation, our new methodology, the Luria–Delbrück method (“LDM”), can be used on a diverse set of bacterial systems, including cases for which current approaches are inaccurate. A notable example involves plasmid transfer between different strains or species where the rate that one type of cell donates the plasmid is not equal to the rate at which the other cell type donates. Asymmetry in these rates has the potential to bias or constrain current transfer estimates, thereby limiting our capabilities for estimating transfer in microbial communities. In contrast, the LDM overcomes obstacles of traditional methods by avoiding restrictive assumptions about growth and transfer rates for each population within the assay. Using stochastic simulations and experiments, we show that the LDM has high accuracy and precision for estimation of transfer rates compared to the most widely used methods, which can produce estimates that differ from the LDM estimate by orders of magnitude.Plasmid transfer can often spread resistance between important clinical pathogens. This study shows that widely used methods can lead to biased estimates of plasmid transfer rate by several orders of magnitude, and presents a new approach, inspired by the classic Luria-Delbrück approach, for accurately assessing this fundamental rate parameter

Suggested Citation

  • Olivia Kosterlitz & Adamaris Muñiz Tirado & Claire Wate & Clint Elg & Ivana Bozic & Eva M Top & Benjamin Kerr, 2022. "Estimating the transfer rates of bacterial plasmids with an adapted Luria–Delbrück fluctuation analysis," PLOS Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 20(7), pages 1-23, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pbio00:3001732
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001732
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