Abstract
Microbes associate in nature forming complex communities, but they are often studied in purified form. Here I show that differences in antibiotic sensitivity between co-existing bacterial species can modify the diffusion of antibiotic molecules, and alter the drug efficacy measured in conventional in vitro assays. I developed a model, validated experimentally using an artificial two-species community, showing antibiotic molecules re-distribute evenly across all species if they have similar drug sensitivity. The result is lower drug efficacy with respect to conventional in vitro assays. However, when species have different sensitivities, the re-distribution of antibiotic is uneven and most sensitive species accumulate more drug. The result is increased drug efficacy against these species. Despite this discrepancy with conventional laboratory assays, my data suggests the changes in drug efficacy are predictable and provides insight into how communities can affect the diffusion of other molecules in the environment.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Abstract, introduction and discussion rewritten to remove references to cancer. Added data for drug-sensitive neighbour, and further theoretical predictions that are consistent with the experimental data.