Publication | Open Access
Antibiotic Resistance Mechanisms of Clinically Important Bacteria
346
Citations
24
References
2011
Year
Bacterial resistance to antimicrobial drugs is an increasing health and economic problem. Bacteria may be innate resistant or acquire resistance to one or few classes of antimicrobial agents. Acquired resistance arises from: (i) mutations in cell genes (chromosomal mutation) leading to cross-resistance, (ii) gene transfer from one microorganism to other by plasmids (conjugation or transformation), transposons (conjugation), integrons and bacteriophages (transduction). After a bacterium gains resistance genes to protect itself from various antimicrobial agents, bacteria can use several biochemical types of resistance mechanisms: antibiotic inactivation (interference with cell wall synthesis, e.g., β-lactams and glycopeptide), target modification (inhibition of protein synthesis, e.g., macrolides and tetracyclines; interference with nucleic acid synthesis, e.g., fluoroquinolones and rifampin), altered permeability (changes in outer membrane, e.g., aminoglycosides; new membrane transporters, e.g., chloramphenicol), and "bypass" metabolic pathway (inhibition of metabolic pathway, e.g., trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole).
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Emerging Plasmid-Mediated Quinolone Resistance Associated with the <i>qnr</i> Gene in <i>Klebsiella pneumoniae</i> Clinical Isolates in the United States Minggui Wang, Daniel F. Sahm, George A. Jacoby, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy Microbial PathogensKlebsiella PneumoniaeQuinolone ResistanceMolecular BiologyAntibiotic Resistance | 2004 | 238 |
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