Subtitle: Why stable colonisation sometimes shifts into active disease


Introduction

If microbes can live quietly in the lungs for years, why do they sometimes turn aggressive?
Evolutionary biology and microbiome research show that infection often develops because of environmental pressures — not by design, but as a by-product of survival in a changing ecosystem.


1. Antibiotic Pressure

Repeated antibiotic courses kill sensitive strains and leave behind resistant survivors.
These survivors often produce thicker biofilms and inflammatory molecules, which protect them but also damage airway tissue.
Over time, this selection creates harder-to-treat, more inflammatory strains.


2. Nutrient Competition

Airways are crowded ecosystems.
When nutrients run low, microbes compete by releasing toxins, proteases, and iron-scavenging molecules.
These harm competitors — and incidentally harm the lung.


3. Biofilms and Mutation

Within biofilms, bacteria and fungi evolve quickly.
Mutations can accumulate, producing hypermutator strains that are well adapted to chronic survival but also more inflammatory.


4. Host Factors

Changes in the body — reduced immunity, steroid use, diabetes, or viral infections — relax immune control.
Organisms that were previously contained can now proliferate.
Similarly, damaged or scarred airways provide sheltered niches where microbes thrive.


5. Microbiome Collapse

The healthy lung microbiome helps regulate inflammation and suppress invaders.
When broad antibiotics or infections reduce diversity, opportunists like Pseudomonas or Aspergillus can expand unchecked.


6. Collateral Damage, Not Intent

Most microbes don’t “want” to be pathogenic — they’re simply adapting to survive.
Their survival strategies (biofilms, enzymes, toxins) cause collateral damage to airway tissue.
So, pathogenicity is often an accidental consequence of survival pressure.


7. Cycles of Stability and Flare-Ups

Chronic airway diseases often follow repeating cycles:

  1. Stable colonisation – coexistence with minimal inflammation

  2. Disruption – antibiotics, viral infection, or new strain

  3. Flare-up – inflammation and tissue damage

  4. Partial recovery – new stable community forms

Each cycle leaves the microbial ecosystem slightly altered — selecting for organisms that can survive stress and immune attack.


Evolutionary Summary

Pressure Effect on Microbes Result for Host
Antibiotics Resistant, stress-adapted strains Harder-to-treat infection
Nutrient limitation Toxin and enzyme producers Tissue damage
Immune suppression Less control of microbes Opportunistic growth
Microbiome loss Opportunist expansion Reduced resilience
Biofilm evolution Genetic drift, persistence Chronic inflammation

Key Takeaway

Microbes evolve under pressure from antibiotics, immune stress, and competition.
They don’t plan to harm the host — they adapt to survive.
Unfortunately, those same adaptations often make them more damaging and persistent.

This is why good airway care, careful antibiotic use, and microbiome-friendly approaches are essential to keep the system in balance.


👉 Read also: Colonisation vs Infection in Airways Disease
(Learn how to recognise the difference, when treatment is needed, and how to keep microbial balance.)

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