| Literature DB >> 31294229 |
Abstract
Resistance to antimicrobial agents has become a major source of morbidity and mortality worldwide. When antibiotics were first introduced in the 1900's, it was thought that we had won the war against microorganisms. It was soon discovered however, that the microorganisms were capable of developing resistance to any of the drugs that were used. Apparently most pathogenic microorganisms have the capability of developing resistance to at least some antimicrobial agents. The main mechanisms of resistance are: limiting uptake of a drug, modification of a drug target, inactivation of a drug, and active efflux of a drug. These mechanisms may be native to the microorganisms, or acquired from other microorganisms. Understanding more about these mechanisms should hopefully lead to better treatment options for infective diseases, and development of antimicrobial drugs that can withstand the microorganisms attempts to become resistant.Entities:
Keywords: CRE; ESBL; MRSA; antimicrobial resistance; β-lactamase
Year: 2018 PMID: 31294229 PMCID: PMC6604941 DOI: 10.3934/microbiol.2018.3.482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Microbiol ISSN: 2471-1888
Antimicrobial groups based on mechanism of action.
| Mechanism of Action | Antimicrobial Groups |
| Inhibit Cell Wall Synthesis | β-Lactams |
| Carbapenems | |
| Cephalosporins | |
| Monobactams | |
| Penicillins | |
| Glycopeptides | |
| Depolarize Cell Membrane | Lipopeptides |
| Inhibit Protein Synthesis | Bind to 30S Ribosomal Subunit |
| Aminoglycosides | |
| Tetracyclines | |
| Bind to 50S Ribosomal Subunit | |
| Chloramphenicol | |
| Lincosamides | |
| Macrolides | |
| Oxazolidinones | |
| Streptogramins | |
| Inhibit Nucleic Acid Synthesis | Quinolones |
| Fluoroquinolones | |
| Inhibit Metabolic Pathways | Sulfonamides |
| Trimethoprim |
Figure 1.Resistance vs. persistence. When bacterial cells are exposed to an antimicrobial agent there are two possible scenarios. There may be cells present that are resistant to the antimicrobial agent (A). The non-resistant cells are killed, leaving only the resistant cells. When the resistant cells are regrown, all of the cells in the culture will be resistant. The other possibility is that there may be persister cells (dormant, not resistant) present (B). The non-persister cells are killed, leaving only the persister cells. When the persister cells are regrown, those cells not in a dormant state will still be susceptible to the antimicrobial agent.
Examples of bacteria with intrinsic resistance.
| Organism | Intrinsic resistance |
| aminoglycosides, many β-lactams, quinolones | |
| All gram positives | aztreonam |
| Enterococci | aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, lincosamides |
| cephalosporins | |
| All gram negatives | glycopeptides, lipopeptides |
| macrolides | |
| ampicillin | |
| macrolides | |
| sulfonamides, ampicillin, 1st and 2nd generation cephalosporins, chloramphenicol, tetracycline | |
| aminoglycosides, β-lactams, carbapenems, quinolones | |
| ampicillin, glycopeptides |
Figure 2.General antimicrobial resistance mechanisms.
Figure 3.General structure of main efflux pump families.
Antimicrobial resistance mechanisms.
| Drug | Drug Uptake Limitation | Drug Target Modification | Drug Inactivation | Efflux Pumps |
| β-Lactams | Decreased numbers of porins, no outer cell wall | Gram pos—alterations in PBPs | Gram pos, gram neg—β-lactamases | RND |
| Carbapenems | Changed selectivity of porin | |||
| Cephalosporins | Changed selectivity of porin | |||
| Monobactams | ||||
| Penicillins | ||||
| Glycopeptides | Thickened cell wall, no outer cell wall | Modified peptidoglycan | ||
| Lipopeptides | Modified net cell surface charge | |||
| Aminoglycosides | Cell wall polarity | Ribosomal mutation, methylation | Aminoglycoside modifying enzymes, acetylation, phosphorylation, adenylation | RND |
| Tetracyclines | Decreased numbers of porins | Ribosomal protection | Antibiotic modification, oxidation | MFS, RND |
| Chloramphenicol | Ribosomal methylation | Acetylation of drug | MFS, RND | |
| Lincosamides | Gram pos—ribosomal methylation | ABC, RND | ||
| Macrolides | Ribosomal mutation, methylation | ABC, MFS, RND | ||
| Oxazolidinones | Ribosomal methylation | RND | ||
| Streptogramins | ABC | |||
| Fluoroquinolones | Gram neg—DNA gyrase modification | Acetylation of drug | MATE, MFS, RND | |
| Gram pos—topoisomerase IV | ||||
| Sulfonamides | DHPS reduced binding, overproduction of resistant DHPS | RND | ||
| Trimethoprim | DHFR reduced binding, overproduction of DHFR | RND |
ABC—ATP binding cassette family, DHFR—dihydrofolate reductase, DHPS—dihydropteroate synthase, MATE—multidrug and toxic compound extrusion family, MFS—major facilitator superfamily, PBP—penicillin-binding protein, RND—resistance-nodulation-cell division family.
Antimicrobial resistance mechanisms in Staphylococcus aureus.
| Resistance Mechanism | Antimicrobial Agents |
| Limiting Drug Uptake | Glycopeptides |
| Modification of Drug Target | |
| Glycopeptides | |
| Lipopeptides | |
| Aminoglycosides | |
| Tetracyclines | |
| Macrolides | |
| Lincosamides | |
| Oxazolidinones | |
| Streptogramins | |
| Fluoroquinolones | |
| Metabolic Pathway Inhibitors | |
| Inactivation of Drug | |
| Chloramphenicol | |
| Active Drug Efflux | Tetracyclines |
| Fluoroquinolones |