Publication | Open Access
Pseudomonas Aeruginosa: Resistance to the Max
922
Citations
170
References
2011
Year
Antibiotic ResistanceBacterial PathogensDrug ResistanceAntimicrobial TherapyAntibacterial MechanismsAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesAntimicrobial Drug DiscoveryDrug Resistance AnalysisAmpc AlterationsPseudomonas AeruginosaAntimicrobial PharmacokineticsBacterial ResistanceClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial Resistance GeneAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAntibioticsExtended-spectrum AmpcMicrobiologyAntimicrobial PharmacodynamicsMedicine
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is intrinsically resistant to many antimicrobials and increasingly acquires multidrug resistance through efflux pumps, β‑lactamases, altered permeability, and hypermutator biofilm growth, compromising treatment. The growing prevalence of multidrug‑resistant strains and limited therapeutic options suggest that untreatable P.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is intrinsically resistant to a variety of antimicrobials and can develop resistance during anti-pseudomonal chemotherapy both of which compromise treatment of infections caused by this organism. Resistance to multiple classes of antimicrobials (multidrug resistance) in particular is increasingly common in P. aeruginosa, with a number of reports of pan-resistant isolates treatable with a single agent, colistin. Acquired resistance in this organism is multifactorial and attributable to chromosomal mutations and the acquisition of resistance genes via horizontal gene transfer. Mutational changes impacting resistance include upregulation of multidrug efflux systems to promote antimicrobial expulsion, derepression of ampC, AmpC alterations that expand the enzyme's substrate specificity (i.e., extended-spectrum AmpC), alterations to outer membrane permeability to limit antimicrobial entry and alterations to antimicrobial targets. Acquired mechanisms contributing to resistance in P. aeruginosa include β-lactamases, notably the extended-spectrum β-lactamases and the carbapenemases that hydrolyze most β-lactams, aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes, and 16S rRNA methylases that provide high-level pan-aminoglycoside resistance. The organism's propensity to grow in vivo as antimicrobial-tolerant biofilms and the occurrence of hypermutator strains that yield antimicrobial resistant mutants at higher frequency also compromise anti-pseudomonal chemotherapy. With limited therapeutic options and increasing resistance will the untreatable P. aeruginosa infection soon be upon us?
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