superbug.
bacterium
A random mutation causes one bacterium to become resistant to an antibiotic. Then all the others are killed when the antibiotic is introduced to the environment. The mutated bacterium is free to reproduce and soon many members of that species are resistant to that antibiotic.
The antibiotic resistance may be transferred to a virulent pathogenic bacterium. Then we will not be able to cure the infection.
you can use low concentration of first line antibiotic to the media where will growth antibiotica.perobably most of bacteria will die but some of them will survive.This bacteria are resistant to antibiotics.Its important to inoculate a large amount of bacteria.
Individual bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics through mechanisms such as mutations that prevent the antibiotic from binding to its target, acquiring resistance genes through horizontal gene transfer, or creating biofilms that protect them from the antibiotic's effects. These mechanisms allow the bacteria to survive and reproduce in the presence of the antibiotic, leading to the development of resistant bacterial populations.
it inherited the allele that made it resisnt.
There is no antibiotic called as bacterium. So there is no question of it's being called as broad spectrum or narrow spectrum antibiotic. Bacterium is a term related to bacteria, a type of micro-organism.
Antibiotics will kill off all of the bacteria that have not mutated and formed a resistance to the drug. Those that have a resistance to the antibiotics will survive and multiply into many resistant bacterium. This continuously facilitates the production of new kinds of antibiotic resistant bacteria
These terms refer to antibiotic sensitivities; antibiotic resistant organisms versus antibiotic susceptible organisms.
Also known as "superbugs", antibiotic resistant bacteria have evolved to a point that our usual antibiotics won't kill them. VRE and MRSA are common forms of antibiotic resistant bacteria.
Overuse of traditional antibiotics has caused a selection of those bacteria that are resistant to the antibiotic.
Yes, of course! But not all the time.