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Active H2020 European Commission

The evolutionary epidemiology of commensal bacteria: the case of Escherichia coli from 1980 to 2025

€1.5M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique CNRS
Country France
Start Date Jun 01, 2021
End Date May 31, 2026
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Participant; Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 949208
Grant Description

Understanding the rapid adaptation of infectious pathogens is crucial to design better management policies and anticipate future changes. Yet, existing models often fail to explain these dynamics. I will address this major challenge of evolutionary biology in the bacterial species Escherichia coli.

E. coli is a commensal of the human gut and an opportunistic pathogen causing infections responsible for more than a million deaths worldwide per year. E. coli has rapidly evolved over the last four decades.

From the 1980s, starting from an almost fully sensitive population, multiple antibiotic resistances have emerged and stabilised at an intermediate frequency. Concomitantly, virulence, the propensity to cause infections, increased. The evolutionary processes causing these changes are largely unknown.

To elucidate the drivers of the evolution of commensal E. coli, I will develop a prospective cohort of 200 longitudinally followed healthy volunteersthe largest cohort of its kind.

We will analyse these data in the light of an integrative statistical and mathematical framework describing the ecology of E. coli from the within-host to the population level.

These models will generate testable predictions on the evolution of genomic variants determining virulence, resistance, and colonisation ability.

These predictions will be validated on an exceptional existing dataset composed of 1000 bacterial genomes sampled from healthy human hosts from 1980 to 2025 encompassing around 100,000 generations of bacterial evolution.

This original interdisciplinary framework draws from epidemiology, evolutionary biology and genomics for a better understanding of the evolution of bacteria.

This project is a step towards better predictions of evolutionary dynamics and better stewardship policies for infectious pathogens.

All Grantees

Institut National de la Sante Et de la Recherche Medicale; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique CNRS

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