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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetics of antimicrobial resistance.

TLDR
The spread of mobile genetic elements has greatly contributed to the rapid dissemination of antimicrobial resistance among several bacterial genera of human and veterinary importance, leading to a situation where multidrug resistance phenotypes can be transferred to a susceptible recipient via a single genetic event.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistant strains of bacteria are an increasing threat to animal and human health. Resistance mechanisms to circumvent the toxic action of antimicrobials have been identified and described for all known antimicrobials currently available for clinical use in human and veterinary medicine. Acquired bacterial antibiotic resistance can result from the mutation of normal cellular genes, the acquisition of foreign resistance genes, or a combination of these two mechanisms. The most common resistance mechanisms employed by bacteria include enzymatic degradation or alteration of the antimicrobial, mutation in the antimicrobial target site, decreased cell wall permeability to antimicrobials, and active efflux of the antimicrobial across the cell membrane. The spread of mobile genetic elements such as plasmids, transposons, and integrons has greatly contributed to the rapid dissemination of antimicrobial resistance among several bacterial genera of human and veterinary importance. Antimicrobial resistance genes have been shown to accumulate on mobile elements, leading to a situation where multidrug resistance phenotypes can be transferred to a susceptible recipient via a single genetic event. The increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistant bacterial pathogens has severe implications for the future treatment and prevention of infectious diseases in both animals and humans. The versatility with which bacteria adapt to their environment and exchange DNA between different genera highlights the need to implement effective antimicrobial stewardship and infection control programs in both human and veterinary medicine.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial activity of five herbal extracts against multi drug resistant (MDR) strains of bacteria and fungus of clinical origin.

TL;DR: This study concludes that A. nilotica, C. zeylanicum and S. aromaticum can be used against multidrug resistant microbes causing nosocomial and community acquired infections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial gene amplification: implications for the evolution of antibiotic resistance

TL;DR: This Review highlights the dynamic properties of gene amplifications and describes how they can facilitate adaptive evolution in response to toxic drugs and most types of antibiotic resistance mechanism are deleterious in the absence of antibiotics.
Journal ArticleDOI

The innate growth bistability and fitness landscapes of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

TL;DR: A quantitative phenomenological model is formulated to predict the growth rates of drug-resistant strains in the presence of drugs, based on the well-characterized biochemistry of drug and drug-resistance interactions and on bacterial growth laws that dictate relations between cell growth and gene expression, which reveals a plateau-like fitness landscape.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective Antimicrobial Activities and Action Mechanism of Micelles Self-Assembled by Cationic Oligomeric Surfactants

TL;DR: Cationic micelles formed by cationic trimeric, tetrameric, and hexameric surfactants bearing amide moieties in spacers can efficiently kill Gram-negative E. coli with a very low minimum inhibitory concentration, and do not cause obvious toxicity to mammalian cells at the concentrations used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nucleotide sequence of pOLA52: a conjugative IncX1 plasmid from Escherichia coli which enables biofilm formation and multidrug efflux.

TL;DR: The large conjugative multidrug resistance (MDR) plasmid pOLA52 was sequenced and annotated, and the capability of IncX1 plasmids of facilitating lateral transfer of gene cassettes between different Enterobacteriaceae families was demonstrated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamases in the 21st Century: Characterization, Epidemiology, and Detection of This Important Resistance Threat

TL;DR: β-Lactamases continue to be the leading cause of resistance to β-lactam antibiotics among gram-negative bacteria and are now found in a significant percentage of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae strains in certain countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

A functional classification scheme for beta-lactamases and its correlation with molecular structure.

TL;DR: These enzymes are the major cause of bacterial resistance to b-lactam antibiotics and have been the subject of extensive microbiological, biochemical, and genetic investigations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile genetic elements: the agents of open source evolution.

TL;DR: This review describes MGEs, their properties that are important in horizontal gene transfer, and current opportunities to advance MGE genomics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sampling the Antibiotic Resistome

TL;DR: This work has shown that soil-dwelling bacteria are a reservoir of resistance determinants that can be mobilized into the microbial community, and study of this reservoir could provide an early warning system for future clinically relevant antibiotic resistance mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efflux-Mediated Drug Resistance in Bacteria

TL;DR: Fluoroquinolones and β-lactams of the latest generations are likely to select for overproduction mutants of these pumps and make the bacteria resistant in one step to practically all classes of antibacterial agents.
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