| Literature DB >> 34884695 |
Andrea-Sarahí Balderrama-González1, Hilda-Amelia Piñón-Castillo2, Claudia-Adriana Ramírez-Valdespino1, Linda-Lucila Landeros-Martínez2, Erasmo Orrantia-Borunda1, Hilda-Esperanza Esparza-Ponce1.
Abstract
Antibiotics are being less effective, which leads to high mortality in patients with infections and a high cost for the recovery of health, and the projections that are had for the future are not very encouraging which has led to consider antimicrobial resistance as a global health problem and to be the object of study by researchers. Although resistance to antibiotics occurs naturally, its appearance and spread have been increasing rapidly due to the inappropriate use of antibiotics in recent decades. A bacterium becomes resistant due to the transfer of genes encoding antibiotic resistance. Bacteria constantly mutate; therefore, their defense mechanisms mutate, as well. Nanotechnology plays a key role in antimicrobial resistance due to materials modified at the nanometer scale, allowing large numbers of molecules to assemble to have a dynamic interface. These nanomaterials act as carriers, and their design is mainly focused on introducing the temporal and spatial release of the payload of antibiotics. In addition, they generate new antimicrobial modalities for the bacteria, which are not capable of protecting themselves. So, nanoparticles are an adjunct mechanism to improve drug potency by reducing overall antibiotic exposure. These nanostructures can overcome cell barriers and deliver antibiotics to the cytoplasm to inhibit bacteria. This work aims to give a general vision between the antibiotics, the nanoparticles used as carriers, bacteria resistance, and the possible mechanisms that occur between them.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial resistance; bacteria; nanoparticles; resistance mechanism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884695 PMCID: PMC8657868 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
The official list of pathogen bacteria with declared priority by the WHO. Adapted with permission from WHO (permission 387722) [17].
| Priority | Pathogenic Bacteria | Antibiotics for Which There is Resistance |
|---|---|---|
| Critical |
| Carbapenem |
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
| Carbapenem and 3rd generation cephalosporins | |
|
| 3rd generation cephalosporins | |
| High |
| Vancomycin and methicillin |
|
| ||
|
| Vancomycin | |
|
| Clarithromycin | |
| Fluoroquinolones | ||
|
| 3rd generation fluoroquinolone | |
| Medium |
| |
|
| Non-sensible to penicillin | |
| Ampicillin and fluroquinolones |
Figure 1Extra chromosomal mutation: transformation, conjugation, and transduction. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 17 November 2021).
Figure 2Efflux pump families: (a) ABC, (b) MATE, (c) SMR, (d) MFS, (e) RND. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 17 November 2021).
Figure 3Action mechanism of inorganic nanoparticles. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 17 November 2021).
Recent studies on metallic nanoparticles against pathogenic bacteria resistance.
| Elemental Composition | Size and Morpho | Concentration (µg/mL) | Bacteria | Antibiotic | Inhibit | Mechanims | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AgNPs | 10 nm | 2.5 |
| N/A | ~90% | AgNPs can enter cells and inhibits enzymatic systems in the respiratory chain, thereby altering their DNA synthesis | Salomoni et al. (2017) [ |
| AgNPs | 35 ± 15 nm | 0.35 |
| Chloramphenicol | 50% | The combination of the AgNPs + | Vazquez-Muñoz et al. (2019) [ |
| 0.05 | Kanamycin | 95% | |||||
| AgNPs | ~26 nm | 1 + 5 E |
| Erythromycin (E) | ~80% | ROS generation and mechanism of action of antibiotic | Ipe et al. (2020) [ |
| AgNPs | 8–21 nm | 15.62 |
| Ciprofloxacin | 0.25 mm | ROS generation and enhancement | Thomas et al. (2020) [ |
| Mesoporous silica | 50–100 nm | 426 |
| Cefepime | 11 mm | Antibiotic mechanims | Najafi et al. (2021) [ |
| AuNPs | 33 ± 14 nm | 2/4 |
| Amoxicillin | 31 mm | The combination of antibiotic and NPs increase the concentration of antibiotic at the site of bacterium-antibiotic interaction; in additionthe multivalent presentation of amoxicillin blockade of the bacterial efflux pump | Kalita et al. (2016) [ |
| AuNPs | 35 nm | 0.72 |
| Impinem | 72 mm I/35 & 48 mm I/200 | The NPs improve the mechanism of action of antibiotic | Shaker et al. (2017) [ |
| AuNPs | 8 ± 2 nm | 0.15 | Amoxicillin | 85% | ROS generation by the antibiotic effect | Silvero et al. (2018) [ | |
| AuNPs | 30 ± 20 nm | 1.5 |
| Amoxicillin | 60–70% | Biofilm damage | Rocca et al. (2020) [ |
| AuNPs | 5 nm | 1.18 |
| Colistin | - | N/A | Fuller et al. (2020) [ |
| AuNPs | 25 nm | 62.5 |
| N/A | 19 mm | AuNPs have a significant inhibitory effect on bacteria, to their ability to associate with the bacteria cell wall and rupture it, as well as disrupting bacterial metabolism by interfering with bacterial DNA | Abdulazeem et al. (2021) [ |
| TiO2NPs | 64 ± 0.14 nm | 8–64 |
| Ceftriaxone | 96% | The antibiotic in combination with the nanostructure increases the synergistic effect of an antibiotic as can inhibit the cell | Youssef et al. (2020) [ |