3.1.17

Antibiotic Resistance 2

Test yourself on Antibiotic Resistance 2

Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

Antibiotic Resistance

Bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics. This is the process:

Random mutations

Random mutations

  • Within a population of bacteria, some will have random mutations (random change in DNA).
    • The mutated bacteria are resistant to antibiotics and so they are able to survive, whilst the non-resistant bacteria die.
Natural selection

Natural selection

  • The resistant bacteria can reproduce rapidly because their competition (the non-resistant bacteria) has been destroyed by the antibiotic.
  • When the resistant bacteria reproduce, they produce genetically-identical copies. These copies will all be resistant to the antibiotics.
Jump to other topics
1

Cell Biology

1.1

What's in Cells?

1.2

Cell Division

1.3

Transport in Cells

2

Organisation

2.1

Principles of Organisation

2.2

Enzymes

2.3

Circulatory System

2.4

Non-Communicable Diseases

2.5

Plant Tissues, Organs & Systems

3

Infection & Response

4

Bioenergetics

5

Homeostasis & Response

5.1

Homeostasis

5.2

The Human Nervous System

5.3

Hormonal Coordination in Humans

5.4

Plant Hormones

6

Inheritance, Variation & Evolution

6.1

Reproduction

6.2

Variation & Evolution

6.3

Genetics & Evolution

6.4

Classification

7

Ecology

7.1

Adaptations & Interdependence

7.2

Organisation of Ecosystems

7.3

Biodiversity

7.4

Trophic Levels

7.5

Food Production

Practice questions on Antibiotic Resistance 2

Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
Answer all questions on Antibiotic Resistance 2

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium