It is important that antibiotics prescriptions are based on antimicrobial susceptibility data to ensure effective treatment outcomes. The increasing availability of next-generation sequencing, bacterial whole genome sequencing (WGS) can facilitate a more reliable and faster alternative to traditional phenotyping for the detection and surveillance of AMR. This work proposes a machine learning approach that can predict the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for a given antibiotic, here ciprofloxacin, on the basis of both genome-wide mutation profiles and profiles of acquired antimicrobial resistance genes. We analysed 704 Escherichia coli genomes combined with their respective MIC measurements for ciprofloxacin originating from different countries. The four most important predictors found by the model, mutations in gyrA residues Ser83 and Asp87, a mutation in parC residue Ser80 and presence of the qnrS1 gene, have been experimentally validated before. Using only these four predictors in a linear regression model, 65% and 93% of the test samples' MIC were correctly predicted within a two- and a four-fold dilution range, respectively. The presented work does not treat machine learning as a black box model concept, but also identifies the genomic features that determine susceptibility. The recent progress in WGS technology in combination with machine learning analysis approaches indicates that in the near future WGS of bacteria might become cheaper and faster than a MIC measurement.
Journal article
Scientific reports
14/09/2020
10
Department of Physics of Complex Systems, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. patbaa@caesar.elte.hu.
SPS COMPARE ML-AMR group, Escherichia coli, Ciprofloxacin, DNA Gyrase, Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins, Escherichia coli Proteins, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Toxicity Tests, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Mutation, Genes, Bacterial, Machine Learning