| Literature DB >> 31632102 |
Reza Ranjbar1, Abbas Farahani1.
Abstract
Shigella spp. are a common cause of diarrheal disease and have remained an important pathogen responsible for increased rates of morbidity and mortality caused by dysentery each year around the globe. Antibiotic treatment of Shigella infections plays an essential role in reducing prevalence and death rates of the disease. However, treatment of these infections remains a challenge, due to the global rise in broad-spectrum resistance to many antibiotics. Drug resistance in Shigella spp. can result from many mechanisms, such as decrease in cellular permeability, extrusion of drugs by active efflux pumps, and overexpression of drug-modifying and -inactivating enzymes or target modification by mutation. Therefore, there is an increasing need for identification and evolution of alternative therapeutic strategies presenting innovative avenues against Shigella infections, as well as paying further attention to this infection. The current review focuses on various antibiotic-resistance mechanisms of Shigella spp. with a particular emphasis on epidemiology and new mechanisms of resistance and their acquisition, and also discusses the status of novel strategies for treatment of Shigella infection and vaccine candidates currently under evaluation in preclinical or clinical phases.Entities:
Keywords: Shigella; antibiotics; biofilm; drug resistance; efflux pumps; mechanism; prevention; resistance; treatment; vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31632102 PMCID: PMC6789722 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S219755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Prevalence Of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes In Shigella Spp. Isolated From Different Regions Of The World
| Antimicrobial Class | Resistance Mechanism | Genes Mediating Antimicrobial Resistance | Origin | Geographic Origin | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| β-Lactams | Class A β-lactamases | P | Argentina, France | ||
| C, P | India | ||||
| P | China, Turkey | ||||
| — | Argentina | ||||
| I, P | Lebanon, Chile, China, India, Iran, US, Djibouti, Denmark, France, Greece, Brazil, South Korea, UK, Romania | ||||
| I, P | China, South Korea | ||||
| – | South Korea | ||||
| South Korea | |||||
| – | South Korea | ||||
| – | South Korea | ||||
| P | South Korea | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| P | Argentina, Turkey, South Korea, Israel | ||||
| P | China, Turkey, Argentina, South Korea, India, Israel | ||||
| P | China, Turkey, Argentina, South Korea, US, Japan | ||||
| C, P | China, Spain, Iran, South Korea, India, US, Lebanon, Japan, Poland, New Zealand, France, Romania | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| – | China | ||||
| – | Israel | ||||
| P | China, South Korea | ||||
| – | China | ||||
| P | Japan | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| P | China | ||||
| Class B β-lactamases | P | India, France | |||
| – | Senegal, France | ||||
| P | Japan | ||||
| – | India | ||||
| Class C β-lactamases | C, P | China, Mexico, India, Iran, Taiwan, Costa Rica, Romania | |||
| C | Iran | ||||
| C, I, P | China, India, Israel | ||||
| Class D β-lactamases | I, P | Mozambique, Chile, China, India, US, Egypt, Djibouti, Spain, Greece, Denmark, Peru, Iran | |||
| I | Mozambique, Spain, Israel | ||||
| – | Mozambique, Spain | ||||
| I, P | Senegal, China, France, Japan, Spain, Brazil | ||||
| Quinolones | Plasmid-borne resistance | P | Iran | ||
| P | China, India, Iran | ||||
| P | Switzerland | ||||
| P | Switzerland | ||||
| P | India | ||||
| P | Iran, China, India, Pakistan | ||||
| P | Iran, China, Switzerland, US | ||||
| P | US, India, Japan, China, Iran | ||||
| Efflux pumps | P | China, Switzerland | |||
| Fosfomycin | Fosfomycin resistance enzymes | P | China | ||
| Aminoglycosides: streptomycin | MGE | India, Australia, Chile, Pakistan, South Korea | |||
| MGE | India, Chile, Pakistan, South Korea | ||||
| Adenyltransferase | I, P | Senegal, Bhutan, India, Taiwan, Spain, China, Iran, France, Australia, Brazil, Pakistan, South Korea | |||
| I, P | Taiwan, Spain, China, South Korea, France, Australia, Korea | ||||
| I, P | Taiwan, China, Iran | ||||
| Tetracycline | Efflux pumps | C, P | Mozambique, Taiwan, Chile, Peru, Brazil, Iran, Spain, Pakistan, South Korea | ||
| C, P | Mozambique, Taiwan, Peru, France, Brazil, Iran, Spain, Pakistan | ||||
| C, P | Mozambique, Spain | ||||
| Trimethoprim | Dihydrofolate reductases | I, P | Spain, Taiwan, Senegal, Mozambique, India, Bhutan, China, Iran, South Korea, Peru, France, Chile, Australia | ||
| I, P | Spain, Senegal, China | ||||
| I, P | Spain, Iran, France | ||||
| P | Mozambique, Chile | ||||
| I, P | Spain, Taiwan, Korea, Australia, South Korea | ||||
| P | South Korea | ||||
| P | Mozambique, Chile | ||||
| P | Mozambique | ||||
| I, P | Spain, Senegal | ||||
| P | Spain | ||||
| I, P | Taiwan, China, Iran, Brazil | ||||
| I, P | China, India | ||||
| Sulfonamides | Plasmid-borne resistance | I, P | Australia, South Korea, Taiwan | ||
| I, P | Taiwan, India, Peru, Chile, Bangladesh, South Korea | ||||
| I, P | Taiwan | ||||
| Phenicols | Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase genes | P | Taiwan, Mozambique, India, Peru, France, Brazil, Pakistan | ||
| P | Pakistan | ||||
| Efflux pumps | I, P | Taiwan, Mozambique | |||
| Colistin | Plasmid-borne resistance | P | China, Vietnam | ||
| Macrolide | Enzymatic inactivation | P | Palestine, Switzerland, Vietnam, China, Canada, UK, Peru | ||
| rRNA methylase | P | Vietnam, Canada, UK |
Abbreviations: P, plasmid; C, chromosome; I, integron; —, unknown; MGE, mobile genetic element.
Figure 1Schematic representation of blaCTX-M-55, blaCTX-M-15, and blaTEM-1 genes in different types of plasmid. Arrows indicate positions and directions of different genes and IRL, terminal inverted repeats at the left, IRR, terminal inverted repeats at the right.
Figure 2Physical map of Shigella atypical class 1 integron and locations of blaOXA-30 and aadA genes.
Frequency Of Amino-Acid And Nucleotide Changes In The Quinolone Resistance–Determining Regions Of ShigellaIsolates In Different Parts Of The World
| Target Site Mutations | Codon | Amino-Acid Changes | Nucleotide Mutation | Country Of Detection | Reference(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 57 | Asn→Lys | AAT→AAA | China | |||
| 69 | Gln→Trp | — | India | |||
| 71 | Phe→Ser | — | India | |||
| 72 | Ser→Pro | — | India | |||
| 75 | Met→Leu | — | India | |||
| 80 | His→Pro | CAT→CCT | China | |||
| 80 | His→ Gly | CAT→GGT | Belgium | |||
| 83 | Ser→Leu | TCG →TTG | China, Bangladesh, Switzerland, Thailand, India | |||
| 87 | Asp→Asn | GAC→AAC | China, Bangladesh, Switzerland, India | |||
| 87 | Asp→Gly | GAC→GGC | China, Switzerland, Thailand, India | |||
| 87 | Asp→Tyr | GAC→TAC | Switzerland | |||
| 90 | Ser→Cys | — | India | |||
| 94 | Met→Leu | — | India | |||
| 106 | His→Pro | — | India | |||
| 161 | Asn→His | — | India | |||
| 163 | Thr→Ala | — | India | |||
| 196 | Val→Ala | — | India | |||
| 211 | His→Tyr | CAC→TAC | China, Bangladesh | |||
| 517 | Gln→Arg | CAG→CGA | China | |||
| 64 | Ala→Asp | GCC→GAC | India, China | |||
| 64 | Ala→Cys | GCC→TGC | China | |||
| 80 | Ser→Ile | AGC→ATC | China, Bangladesh, Switzerland, India | |||
| 81 | Ala→Pho | — | China | |||
| 83 | Ser→Leu | — | China | |||
| 85 | Ala→Thr | GCG→ACG | China | |||
| 85 | Ala→Ser | GCG→TCG | Switzerland | |||
| 86 | Met→Trp | ATG→TGG | China | |||
| 91 | Gln→His | — | China | |||
| 93 | Phe→Val | — | India | |||
| 101 | Asp→Glu | — | India | |||
| 110 | Asp→Glu | — | India | |||
| 111 | Asp→His | GAT→CAT | China | |||
| 129 | Ser→Pro | TCC→CCC | China | |||
| 408 | Gly→Asp | GGC→GAC | China | |||
| 458 | Ser→Leu | TCG→TTG | China, India | |||
| 458 | Ser→Ala | TCG→GCG | India |
Note: —, unknown.
Figure 3Structure of genes surrounding mcr-1 in S. flexneri.
Figure 4Variable regions of class 1 (A) and class 2 (B) integrons reported in different geographic area. Horizontal arrows indicate transcriptional orientation of genes.
Overview Of Shigella Vaccines In A Aifferent Phase
| Class/type | Investigational Vaccines | Delivery Systems | Target Antigen (Type) | Valued Immunoresponse | Status And Results | Limitations | Development Phase | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live-vaccine candidate strain | Intranasal | Whole-cell | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection in guinea pigs | Unknown | Preclinical | ||
| Live attenuated strains | Ocular | Humoral | Ongoing, protection in guinea pigs | Needs balancing immunogenicity with reactogenicity | Preclinical | |||
| Oral | Humoral | Efficacy when given orally | Transient diarrhea | Phase I | ||||
| oral | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection | ND | Phas IIB | ||||
| Oral | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection | Unknown | Phase II | ||||
| Oral | Humoral | Phase I, ongoing, protection in adults | Children elicited lower mucosal immunoresponses than adults | Phase I | ||||
| Oral | Humoral | Ongoing, need for human challenge models for the efficacy of the vaccine | Fever, transient diarrhea | Phase I | ||||
| Trivalent of | Intranasal | Humoral | Ongoing, prevention in guinea pigs and needs further development | Unknown | Preclinical | |||
| Oral | Humoral and cellular | Completed, efficacy, prevention and induces diverse T-CMI responses in human volunteers | ND | Phase II | ||||
| RNA-binding protein mutants of | Ocular and oral | Humoral | Ongoing, induced protective immunity | Animals vaccinated in the eye showed fewer symptoms | Preclinical | |||
| Hybrid and live attenuated vectors | Oral | O-antigen biosynthesis gene | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection in mice | Unknown | Preclinical | ||
| Intranasal and oral | Humoral | Ongoing, efficacy and future investigation need for more attenuated recombinant mutant strains | Fever and diarrhea | Phase II | ||||
| Live transconjugant | Oral | Humoral and cellular | Completed, efficacy and good protection in mice | Unknown | Preclinical | |||
| Oral | pWR110–R64drdll invasiveness plasmid | Humoral | Stopped, causes mild diarrhea in human primates | Fever, mild diarrhea to frank dysentery | Preclinical | |||
| Oral | Humoral | Stopped, EcSf2a was immunogenic but also reactogenic and thus not sufficiently attenuated in the guinea pig | Not sufficiently attenuated | Preclinical | ||||
| Whole cell–killed vaccines | Intranasal | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection | ND | Preclinical | |||
| Oral | Inactivated whole cells | Humoral and cellular | Completed, safety, robust immunoresponse | ND | Phase I | |||
| Oral | Inactivated whole cells | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection | ND | Phase I | |||
| Trivalent of | Intranasal | Formalin inactivation of | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection from lethality in guinea pig infection model | Unknown | Preclinical | ||
| Heat-killed multiple serogroups/serotypes of | Oral | Humoral and cellular | Completed, efficacy, protection in rabbit infection model | ND | Preclinical | |||
| Subunit vaccines | IpaDB fusion proteins | Intradermal | Invasion plasmid antigens B and D (IpaB and IpaD) | Humoral | Ongoing, protective efficacy using a mouse pulmonary infection model | ND | Preclinical | |
| rIpaB domain rGroEL | Lung | Humoral | Immunogenic and protective efficacy against | ND | Preclinical | |||
| Glycoconjugate candidates | Bioglycoconjugates | Intramuscular | Humoral | Ongoing, protection, additional serotypes will be tested shortly | ND | Phase I | ||
| Lipid-linked | Intramuscular | O-SP Ag | Humoral | Ongoing, need future studies using synthetic saccharides of different size | Low level of antibodies | Preclinical | ||
| O-polysaccharide covalently linked to immunogenic carrier proteins | Subcutaneous | O-SP Ag | Humoral | Ongoing studies | Unknown | Preclinical | ||
| Synthetic oligosaccharides | Intramuscular | Humoral | Ongoing, need future studies for the development of multivalent glycoconjugate vaccines | Unknown | Preclinical | |||
| Novel antigen candidates | Artificial Invaplex (recombinant IpaB and IpaC proteins with purified | Intranasal | LPS, IpaB, and IpaC Ag | Humoral | Efficacy, protection in mice, need future testes for determination of safety and immune response in humans | ND | Preclinical | |
| Triacylated S-LPS | Parenteral | Partial alkaline deacylation of S-LPS | Humoral | Completed, efficacy, protection with robust humoral immunoresponse | Unknown | Phase I | ||
| GMMA protein particles | - | Outer-membrane particles from | Humoral | Completed, good safety and immunogenicity profiles in healthy adults | ND | Phase IIa | ||
| Δ | Intramuscular | Outer-membrane vesicles, disruption of | Humoral | An ongoing, potentially cost-effective vaccine in the mouse infection model | ND | Preclinical | ||
| OMV-nanoparticle vaccine | Intranasal | Humoral | Ongoing, need future studies for the development of a multivalent vaccine | ND | Preclinical | |||
| Recombinant probiotic–based candidates | Intranasal | IpaB and IpaD | Humoral | Ongoing, prevention in adult and infant mice | Unknown | Preclinical | ||
| Subcutaneous | Humoral | Ongoing, efficacy of provoked immunoresponses in affording protection from | Unknown | Preclinical | ||||