Publication | Open Access
Sulfonamide resistance mechanism in Escherichia coli: R plasmids can determine sulfonamide-resistant dihydropteroate synthases.
105
Citations
22
References
1975
Year
Klebsiella PneumoniaeEscherichia ColiAntibiotic ResistanceDrug ResistanceAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesNormal Sulfonamide-sensitive EnzymeAntimicrobial Drug DiscoveryBiochemistrySulfonamide ResistanceAntibacterial AgentMolecular MicrobiologyNormal Sensitive EnzymeClinical MicrobiologyR PlasmidsBiomolecular EngineeringAntimicrobial Resistance GeneAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAntibioticsSulfonamide Resistance MechanismMicrobiologyMedicineMicrobial Genetics
Several natural isolate E. coli strains highly resistant to sulfonamides and antibiotics are shown to contain a sulfonamide-resistant dihydropteroate synthase (2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropteridine-diphosphate:4-aminobenzoate 2-amino-4-hydroxydihydropteridine-6-methenyltransferase, EC 2.5.1.15) in addition to the normal sensitive enzyme. The resistant dihydropteroate synthases examined are determined by an R plasmid and are smaller and less heat stable than the normal sulfonamide-sensitive enzyme. One synthase resistant to any sulfonamide tested, and to sulfanilic and arsanilic acids, was still inhibited by several non-sulfonamide analogs of p-aminobenzoate. Citrobacter and Klebsiella pneumoniae strains also show similar mechanisms of sulfonamide resistance.
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