Bacteria evolving to thrive in changing temperatures, impacting future antibiotic resistance.
Bacteria evolved over 20,000 generations in a constant environment to see how they adapted to different temperatures. They got better at growing in moderate temperatures but struggled at very low and high temperatures. This happened mainly early on in the experiment when they were adapting quickly. Some bacteria had more mutations in their DNA repair, but it didn't make them worse at extreme temperatures. The changes in growth rate were likely due to genetic trade-offs rather than random mutations.