| Literature DB >> 32292819 |
Michaela Růžičková1, Monika Vítězová1, Ivan Kushkevych1.
Abstract
The constantly growing bacterial resistance against antibiotics is recently causing serious problems in the field of human and veterinary medicine as well as in agriculture. The mechanisms of resistance formation and its preventions are not well explored in most bacterial genera. The aim of this review is to analyse recent literature data on the principles of antibiotic resistance formation in bacteria of the Enterococcus genus. Furthermore, the habitat of the Enterococcus genus, its pathogenicity and pathogenicity factors, its epidemiology, genetic and molecular aspects of antibiotic resistance, and the relationship between these bacteria and bowel diseases are discussed. So-called VREfm - vancomycin resistant Enterococcus faecium and its currently rapidly growing resistance as well as the significance of these bacteria in nosocomial diseases is described.Entities:
Keywords: Enterococcaceae; Enterococcus faecium; antibiotics; nosocomial diseases; resistance; vancomycin
Year: 2020 PMID: 32292819 PMCID: PMC7147287 DOI: 10.1515/med-2020-0032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Med (Wars)
Figure 1Enterococci cells, scanning electron microscope (A) [9] and the colonies of Enterococcus faecalis, blood agar, 24 hours cultivation, 37°C (B) [10]
Division of phylogenetically similar species of the Enterococcus genus [26]
| E. faecium | E. avium | E. faecalis |
|---|---|---|
Figure 2pCF10 plasmid map [34]
Figure 3E. faecalis conjugation [35]
Figure 4Genetic map of Tn1546 transposon [41]
Figure 5Map of Europe with a percentage of resistant strains from total number of isolates in species E. faecium in year 2017 [45]
Figure 6Graph of percentage of resistant strains of species E. faecium in the United States in years 1999–2016 [46]
Figure 7Map of Southeast Asia with a percentage of vancomycin resistant strains from the total number of isolates in species E. faecium in the year 2017 [46]