In a surprising discovery researchers at Boston University and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard have found that charitable behaviour

This bacterial altruism results when the most resistant isolates produce a small molecule called indole.
Indole acts as something of a steroid, helping the strain's more vulnerable members bulk up enough to fight off the antibiotic onslaught. But while indole may save the group, its production takes a toll on the fitness level of the individual isolates that produce it.
"We weren't expecting to find this. Typically, you would expect only the resistant strains to survive, with the susceptible ones dying off in the face of antibiotic stress. We were quite surprised to find the weak strains not only surviving, but thriving," Nature quoted lead investigator Dr. James J. Collins, professor of Biomedical Engineering at Boston University and a core faculty member of the Wyss Institute, as saying.
The findings also shed new light on the level of complexity and heterogeneity within bacterial strains.
Until now, it was assumed that the overall resistance level of any given population was reflected in each of its isolates.
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The fact that the full complexity of bacteria strains can now be more accurately understood has significant ramifications for the medical community.
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The findings appear in the latest issue of Nature.
Source-ANI