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Heteroresistance: An Insidious Form of Antibiotic Resistance

July 30, 2024

Are all cells in a population of bacteria identical?

Agar plate covered in bacteria and circles where some bacteria have died
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing. There may be resistant subpopulations of bacteria that go undetected.
Source: iStock.com/Md Saiful Islam Khan
When it comes to antibiotic resistance, the answer is a clinically unfortunate “no.” A single population may harbor some cells that are susceptible to an antibiotic and others that are resistant. Bacteria exhibiting this mishmash of antibiotic susceptibilities, a phenomenon known as heteroresistance, are hard to detect and harder still to treat. It is this insidiousness that has prompted some scientists, like , director of the Emory Antibiotic Resistance Center and a professor in the Department of Medicine at Emory University, to peg heteroresistance as the next frontier in the fight against antibiotic resistance.

“There will be growing deaths due to antibiotic resistance in the future; by 2050, potentially ,” Weiss stated during a scientific session at º£½ÇÉçÇøappMicrobe 2024. However, “It could be even worse if heteroresistance and other subpopulation behaviors that, right now, are not even classified as resistance are taken into account.” 

The Mechanics of Heteroresistance

—when a single bacterial strain harbors both susceptible and resistant cells—occurs among diverse bacteria and in the context of a whole spate of antibiotics: fluoroquinolones, aminoglycosides, β-lactams, you name it. The phenomenon is the presence of a small, resistant subpopulation of bacteria with an 8-fold increase in minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for a drug relative to the main susceptible population (though the magnitude of that increase varies depending on the study). Whether the MIC intersects with the breakpoint of an antibiotic (a pre-determined range that classifies an organism as susceptible or not) is , along with the frequency of resistant cells.


The heterogeneity inherent to heteroresistance can develop in different ways. For example, in some gram-negative bacteria, cells (e.g., β-lactamases), bolstering the number of copies available to fight a drug and giving rise to resistant subpopulations. Mutations in—or altered expression of—antibiotic targets, transporters or in cells, and co-factors associated with their function, are other potential mechanisms.

Weiss highlighted that multiple resistance systems can simultaneously contribute to heteroresistance. “I was taught if you pick a single colony and grow [it up], every [cell] is doing the same thing in there,” he said. “And it looks like that is not the case, and it is way more complicated.” 

Here Until It's Not

What’s problematic (and clinically frustrating) about heteroresistance is that it is unstable—the abundance of resistant cells waxes and wanes depending on the presence or absence of antibiotic.

In a heteroresistant population, “susceptible cells usually grow faster, and resistant cells usually have a fitness cost—when there's no drug, the resistant cells are at a disadvantage,” Weiss explained. “But if you add a drug, everything flips to where now only the resistant ones can survive. Even though they have a fitness disadvantage, they're still the only ones who can grow, so they end up taking over.” Because the bacteria can produce both resistant and susceptible cells, if you take away the drug again, the susceptible population will grow quickly and outcompete the resistant one. Moreover, resistant bacteria can revert to susceptible phenotypes if, for example, they or that mitigate the fitness cost of resistance when there is nothing to resist.
Graphical depiction of heteroresistance, with frequency of resistant cells growing or decreasing depending on if antibiotic is present
Heteroresistance is unstable; the resistant subpopulation expands in the presence of antibiotic, but the frequency of resistant cells decreases in the absence of drug.
Source: Madeline Barron

Such transience is a diagnostic nightmare. While an isolate may be resistant in a patient, once it is sampled and prepared for antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST)—in which it is first grown on media that does not contain antibiotics—the number of resistant cells falls back down to baseline, essentially fading into the background. Because of this, the isolate could be classified as susceptible when it is resistant in a clinical context, giving an inaccurate picture of the bacteria causing a patient’s infection and paving the way for treatment failure.

An Increased Risk of Treatment Failure

This is the chief concern about heteroresistance—resistant cells may sneakily proliferate upon exposure to an antibiotic, creating a situation where the drug is no longer effective. suggests this is a likely possibility, and several studies exploring heteroresistance in and , among others, have similarly lent credence to this unfortunate outcome. For example, a retrospective analysis of pediatric leukemia patients with bloodstream infections caused by S. epidermidis reported that vancomycin heteroresistance and poor clinical response.

In mice, colistin—the last-line antibiotic for gram-negative infections—was animals infected with heteroresistant strains of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. Additional work has shown that stress from host innate immune defenses can indirectly during infection, even in the absence of antibiotic treatment. The result: when the drug is used for treatment, it no longer works. These findings suggest the host may have a role to play in promoting and maintaining heteroresistance in vivo.

Though heteroresistance has been on the scientific radar , there are many questions researchers still have about its clinical impacts, including what it means in terms of patient morbidity and mortality and how widespread it is. 

“The prevalence of heteroresistance [is] very diverse, it’s underreported and it’s underappreciated,” said , a professor in the College of Pharmacy at Midwestern University. Depending on the study, drug, bacteria and detection methods, prevalence estimates range from to of isolates analyzed. Weiss emphasized that more studies with human patients are required to get a firm handle on these knowledge gaps and, in turn, the full extent of the AMR crisis.

Heteroresistance Detection: A Clinical Quandry

There’s a reason why so much about heteroresistance is still hazy: studying and detecting it is tough. This is largely due to a dearth in standard detection methods. “There’re many different individual tests that we use,” Huang said. “But what we still have a hard time with is the feasibility of the workflow to be able to identify heteroresistance in the clinical lab,” so clinicians can use it to inform their treatment plans. 

Etest and graph of PAP results
Etest and PAP for colistin-heteroresistant strains of K. pneumoniae (Mu9, Mu156) compared to a susceptible strain (GA65146). The Etest (whereby the MIC is the highest concentration along an antibiotic-laden strip bacteria are able to grow) was unable to detect resistant subpopulations; PAP was.
Source: Band V.I., et al./mBio, 2018

Currently, the of heteroresistance detection  is a population analysis profile (PAP), in which bacterial cultures are plated on agar plates with 2-fold increasing concentrations of an antibiotic; based on the proportion of surviving bacteria , the isolate is classified as resistant, susceptible or heteroresistant. While the assay quantitatively determines the frequency of a resistant subpopulation—a key aspect for pinning down heteroresistance—it takes days to complete and is expensive.  

Other methods ( and disc diffusion assays) are non-quantitative and only detect resistant subpopulations at high frequency—those present at a low frequency may fly under the radar. Indeed, most AST methods work under the assumption that all bacterial cells in an isolate are the same. They are generally not sensitive enough to capture the heterogeneity that epitomizes heteroresistance, when a resistant subpopulation may only make up a small fraction of cells. Depending on the test used, and frequency of resistant cells, there may be discrepancies in how an isolate is classified, which can cause confusion in how best to treat it.

There are emerging advancements that could address some of these shortcomings. Molecular methods that rely on microbial DNA (e.g., , whole genome sequencing) are possible alternatives, in that they can be quick, relatively cheap and comprehensive. That these methods rely on genotypic markers of resistance—some of which may not be known for certain bacterial/antibiotic pairings—is a downside, and there are cases where phenotypic changes may not result from discernible genetic changes. Other strategies rope in artificial intelligence to increase detection efficiency and sensitivity, such as by pairing microscopy with AI to classify susceptible and resistant phenotypes down to the single cell level.

“[There is a] lack of a uniform standard of validation methods that are feasible to incorporate in our clinical labs. Establishing these methods is really important for us in the heteroresistance field,” Huang stated.

Where Do We Go From Here?

With better detection comes better treatment—the ability to easily determine whether someone is harboring a heteroresistant isolate can arm health care practitioners with the information they need to treat patients as quickly and effectively as they can.  

What that treatment looks like requires additional investigation. Studies is a promising approach, especially if dealing with bacteria exhibiting heteroresistance to multiple drugs—a drug may not work against 1 subpopulation but is effective against another. Huang noted the solutions will likely be multi-factorial, including leaning into precision medicine practices, finding effective detection methods with low labor costs and uncovering new antibiotics to expand the pool of available treatments. In Huang’s eyes, combating the problem will ultimately be a collective effort. “All of us can think about what we can do to overcome heteroresistance.” 


Research in this article was presented at º£½ÇÉçÇøappMicrobe, the annual meeting of the º£½ÇÉçÇøapp, held June 13-17, 2024, in Atlanta.  

From discovering new antibiotics, to implementing policies that steward existing drugs in the antimicrobial toolbox, the Fall 2023 issue of Microcosm explores antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and how to combat one of the largest threats to global public health and the environment. 


Author: Madeline Barron, Ph.D.

Madeline Barron, Ph.D.
Madeline Barron, Ph.D., is the Science Communications Specialist at ASM. She obtained her Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology.