Ever since the introduction of antibiotics in human therapy to treat infectious diseases, it was known that some individuals responded better than others and that some were altogether resistant. In addition, some antibiotics were able to produce side effects of different strength that were in the majority of the cases transmissible to the progeny, while others seemed to ameliorate certain syndromes. These and other aspects shall be addressed in the present chapter.
CITATION STYLE
Villa, T. G., Feijoo-Siota, L., Rama, J. L. R., Sánchez-Pérez, A., & De Miguel-Bouzas, T. (2016). Human mutations affecting antibiotics. In New Weapons to Control Bacterial Growth (pp. 353–393). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28368-5_14
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