Explain antibiotic resistance observed in bacteria in light of Darwinian selection theory.

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asked Dec 2, 2017 by sforrest072 (157,439 points) 63 448 1290
Explain antibiotic resistance observed in bacteria in light of Darwinian selection theory.

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answered Dec 2, 2017 by mdsamim (213,225 points) 5 10 23
selected Feb 23, 2018 by sarthaks
 
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Darwinian selection theory states that individuals with favourable variations are better adapted than individuals with less favourable variation. It means that nature selects the individuals with useful variation as these individuals are better evolved to survive in the existing environment. An example of such selection is antibiotic resistance in bacteria. When bacterial population was grown on an agar plate containing antibiotic penicillin, the colonies that were sensitive to penicillin died, whereas one or few bacterial colonies that were resistant to penicillin survived. This is because these bacteria had undergone chance mutation, which resulted in the evolution of a gene that made them resistant to penicillin drug. Hence, the resistant bacteria multiplied quickly as compared to non-resistant (sensitive) bacteria, thereby increasing their number. Hence, the advantage of an individual over other helps in the struggle for existence.

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