Literature DB >> 15914491

Efflux-mediated antimicrobial resistance.

Keith Poole1.   

Abstract

Antibiotic resistance continues to plague antimicrobial chemotherapy of infectious disease. And while true biocide resistance is as yet unrealized, in vitro and in vivo episodes of reduced biocide susceptibility are common and the history of antibiotic resistance should not be ignored in the development and use of biocidal agents. Efflux mechanisms of resistance, both drug specific and multidrug, are important determinants of intrinsic and/or acquired resistance to these antimicrobials, with some accommodating both antibiotics and biocides. This latter raises the spectre (as yet generally unrealized) of biocide selection of multiple antibiotic-resistant organisms. Multidrug efflux mechanisms are broadly conserved in bacteria, are almost invariably chromosome-encoded and their expression in many instances results from mutations in regulatory genes. In contrast, drug-specific efflux mechanisms are generally encoded by plasmids and/or other mobile genetic elements (transposons, integrons) that carry additional resistance genes, and so their ready acquisition is compounded by their association with multidrug resistance. While there is some support for the latter efflux systems arising from efflux determinants of self-protection in antibiotic-producing Streptomyces spp. and, thus, intended as drug exporters, increasingly, chromosomal multidrug efflux determinants, at least in Gram-negative bacteria, appear not to be intended as drug exporters but as exporters with, perhaps, a variety of other roles in bacterial cells. Still, given the clinical significance of multidrug (and drug-specific) exporters, efflux must be considered in formulating strategies/approaches to treating drug-resistant infections, both in the development of new agents, for example, less impacted by efflux and in targeting efflux directly with efflux inhibitors.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15914491     DOI: 10.1093/jac/dki171

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother        ISSN: 0305-7453            Impact factor:   5.790


  243 in total

1.  Rv1218c, an ABC transporter of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with implications in drug discovery.

Authors:  Meenakshi Balganesh; Sanjana Kuruppath; Nimi Marcel; Sreevalli Sharma; Anju Nair; Umender Sharma
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2010-10-04       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  The resistome of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in relationship to phenotypic susceptibility.

Authors:  Veronica N Kos; Maxime Déraspe; Robert E McLaughlin; James D Whiteaker; Paul H Roy; Richard A Alm; Jacques Corbeil; Humphrey Gardner
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Wide variation in antibiotic resistance proteins identified by functional metagenomic screening of a soil DNA library.

Authors:  Kelly M McGarvey; Konstantin Queitsch; Stanley Fields
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-01-13       Impact factor: 4.792

4.  Genomewide overexpression screen for fosfomycin resistance in Escherichia coli: MurA confers clinical resistance at low fitness cost.

Authors:  Alejandro Couce; Alejandra Briales; Alexandro Rodríguez-Rojas; Coloma Costas; Alvaro Pascual; Jesús Blázquez
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-02-27       Impact factor: 5.191

Review 5.  Origins and evolution of antibiotic resistance.

Authors:  Julian Davies; Dorothy Davies
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 11.056

6.  mexEF-oprN multidrug efflux operon of Pseudomonas aeruginosa: regulation by the MexT activator in response to nitrosative stress and chloramphenicol.

Authors:  Hossam Fetar; Christie Gilmour; Rachael Klinoski; Denis M Daigle; Charles R Dean; Keith Poole
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2010-11-15       Impact factor: 5.191

7.  Expression of multidrug efflux pump genes acrAB-tolC, mdfA, and norE in Escherichia coli clinical isolates as a function of fluoroquinolone and multidrug resistance.

Authors:  Michelle C Swick; Sonia K Morgan-Linnell; Kimberly M Carlson; Lynn Zechiedrich
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2010-11-22       Impact factor: 5.191

8.  Evolutionary genomics of epidemic and nonepidemic strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  Jeremy R Dettman; Nicolas Rodrigue; Shawn D Aaron; Rees Kassen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-12-09       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 9.  Multidrug resistance in bacteria.

Authors:  Hiroshi Nikaido
Journal:  Annu Rev Biochem       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 23.643

10.  Rapid diversification of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis lung-like conditions.

Authors:  Alana Schick; Rees Kassen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-10-01       Impact factor: 11.205

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