# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 4427 | 0 | 1.0000 | Mechanisms of quinolone action and microbial response. Over the years, chromosomal mapping of the bacterial genome of Escherichia coli has demonstrated that many loci are associated with quinolone resistance, which is mainly a result of chromosomal mutation or alteration of the quantity or type of porins in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. There has been one report of a small and confined episode of plasmid-mediated resistance to fluoroquinolones, which did not appear to persist. With the increasingly widespread use of an expanding range of fluoroquinolone antibiotics, a range and mix in individual bacterial isolates of the different mechanisms of resistance to fluoroquinolones will undoubtedly be encountered amongst clinically significant bacteria. Currently, transferable resistance is extremely rare and most resistant bacteria arise from clonal expansion of mutated strains. However, it is conceivable that in the future, horizontal gene transfer may become a more important means of conferring resistance to fluoroquinolones. | 2003 | 12702701 |
| 4830 | 1 | 0.9999 | Mechanisms of resistance to quinolones. The increased use of fluoroquinolones has led to increasing resistance to these antimicrobials, with rates of resistance that vary by both organism and geographic region. Resistance to fluoroquinolones typically arises as a result of alterations in the target enzymes (DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV) and of changes in drug entry and efflux. Mutations are selected first in the more susceptible target: DNA gyrase, in gram-negative bacteria, or topoisomerase IV, in gram-positive bacteria. Additional mutations in the next most susceptible target, as well as in genes controlling drug accumulation, augment resistance further, so that the most-resistant isolates have mutations in several genes. Resistance to quinolones can also be mediated by plasmids that produce the Qnr protein, which protects the quinolone targets from inhibition. Qnr plasmids have been found in the United States, Europe, and East Asia. Although Qnr by itself produces only low-level resistance, its presence facilitates the selection of higher-level resistance mutations, thus contributing to the alarming increase in resistance to quinolones. | 2005 | 15942878 |
| 4835 | 2 | 0.9999 | Genetic and biochemical basis of resistance of Enterobacteriaceae to beta-lactam antibiotics. Resistance to beta-lactam drugs is usually determined by genes mediating the production of beta-lactamases. These genes can be located on resistance plasmids or on the chromosome. Resistance to drugs which have been available for many years is mostly transposable. Although the origin of these genes is not known, it is possible to draw a hypothetical flow diagram of the evolution of resistance genes in general. The mechanism of resistance although mediated in Gram-negative bacteria mostly by beta-lactamases cannot be simply described as the hydrolytic function of the enzyme. It is a complex interaction involving the affinity of the drug for the target and the lactamase, the amount of drug in the periplasmic space, the amount of enzyme and the number of lethal target sites. Usually one of these factors is predominant. | 1986 | 3491818 |
| 4428 | 3 | 0.9999 | Multidrug resistance in enteric and other gram-negative bacteria. In Gram-negative bacteria, multidrug resistance is a term that is used to describe mechanisms of resistance by chromosomal genes that are activated by induction or mutation caused by the stress of exposure to antibiotics in natural and clinical environments. Unlike plasmid-borne resistance genes, there is no alteration or degradation of drugs or need for genetic transfer. Exposure to a single drug leads to cross-resistance to many other structurally and functionally unrelated drugs. The only mechanism identified for multidrug resistance in bacteria is drug efflux by membrane transporters, even though many of these transporters remain to be identified. The enteric bacteria exhibit mostly complex multidrug resistance systems which are often regulated by operons or regulons. The purpose of this review is to survey molecular mechanisms of multidrug resistance in enteric and other Gram-negative bacteria, and to speculate on the origins and natural physiological functions of the genes involved. | 1996 | 8647368 |
| 4429 | 4 | 0.9999 | General mechanisms of resistance to antibiotics. Resistance to antimicrobial agents may result from intrinsic properties of organisms, through mutation and through plasmid- and transposon-specified genes. beta-Lactam resistance is most frequently associated with one or more chromosomal- or plasmid-specified beta-lactamases. Recently, mutations modifying penicillin-binding proteins have been detected with increased frequency as a cause of beta-lactam resistance. Mixed mechanisms, reduced permeability and tolerance are other causes of resistance. Aminoglycoside resistance always involves some modification of drug uptake, most often due to a variety of enzymes modifying these compounds. Reduced uptake is a primary cause of resistance in anaerobic bacteria and bacteria growing anaerobically, some strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and mutants that arise during antimicrobial therapy and are defective in energy-generation systems. Resistance to other antimicrobial agents is presented in tabular form. | 1988 | 3062000 |
| 4836 | 5 | 0.9999 | Genes and spectrum: the theoretical limits. Antibiotic resistance can result either from mutations within a chromosomal gene or from mobile genes imported from outside. In the last 15 years, some of these mobile genes have shown a propensity to adapt to successive antibiotic challenges, the most versatile being the class A beta-lactamases. The TEM and SHV beta-lactamase nuclei, usually after one initial critical mutation, allow a series of successive mutations that increase the spectrum to hydrolyze most cephalosporins. The class C beta-lactamases also show some versatility; while it migrates from the chromosome, subtle changes can occur in the gene to broaden the spectrum. Trimethoprim resistance has shown less adaptability in gram-negative bacteria, but in gram-positive organisms the plasmid has captured the chromosomal dihydrofolate reductase of Staphylococcus epidermidis, and a minimal number of changes have occurred that decrease the binding of trimethroprim. Other resistance mechanisms appear less adaptable, relying rather on the importation of new genes to cope with new challenges. | 1998 | 9710668 |
| 9310 | 6 | 0.9999 | Bacterial resistance to antibiotics. Effective antibacterial drugs have been available for nearly 50 years. After the introduction of each new such drug, whether chemically synthesized or a naturally occurring antibiotic, bacterial resistance to it has emerged. The genetic mechanisms by which bacteria have acquired resistance were quite unexpected; a new evolutionary pathways has been revealed. Although some antibiotic resistance has resulted from mutational changes in structural proteins--targets for the drugs' action--most has resulted from the acquisition of new, ready-made genes from an external source--that is, from another bacterium. Vectors of the resistance genes are plasmids--heritable DNA molecules that are transmissible between bacterial cells. Plasmids without antibiotic-resistance genes are common in all kinds of bacteria. Resistance plasmids have resulted from the insertion of new DNA sequences into previously existing plasmids. Thus, the spread of antibiotic resistance is at three levels: bacteria between people or animals; plasmids between bacteria; and transposable genes between plasmids. | 1984 | 6319093 |
| 4423 | 7 | 0.9999 | Inactivation of antibiotics and the dissemination of resistance genes. The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria is a phenomenon of concern to the clinician and the pharmaceutical industry, as it is the major cause of failure in the treatment of infectious diseases. The most common mechanism of resistance in pathogenic bacteria to antibiotics of the aminoglycoside, beta-lactam (penicillins and cephalosporins), and chloramphenicol types involves the enzymic inactivation of the antibiotic by hydrolysis or by formation of inactive derivatives. Such resistance determinants most probably were acquired by pathogenic bacteria from a pool of resistance genes in other microbial genera, including antibiotic-producing organisms. The resistance gene sequences were subsequently integrated by site-specific recombination into several classes of naturally occurring gene expression cassettes (typically "integrons") and disseminated within the microbial population by a variety of gene transfer mechanisms. Although bacterial conjugation once was believed to be restricted in host range, it now appears that this mechanism of transfer permits genetic exchange between many different bacterial genera in nature. | 1994 | 8153624 |
| 4152 | 8 | 0.9999 | Quinolone resistance: much more than predicted. Since quinolones are synthetic antibiotics, it was predicted that mutations in target genes would be the only mechanism through which resistance could be acquired, because there will not be quinolone-resistance genes in nature. Contrary to this prediction, a variety of elements ranging from efflux pumps, target-protecting proteins, and even quinolone-modifying enzymes have been shown to contribute to quinolone resistance. The finding of some of these elements in plasmids indicates that quinolone resistance can be transferable. As a result, there has been a developing interest on the reservoirs for quinolone-resistance genes and on the potential risks associated with the use of these antibiotics in non-clinical environments. As a matter of fact, plasmid-encoded, quinolone-resistance qnr genes originated in the chromosome of aquatic bacteria. Thus the use of quinolones in fish-farming might constitute a risk for the emergence of resistance. Failure to predict the development of quinolone resistance reinforces the need of taking into consideration the wide plasticity of biological systems for future predictions. This plasticity allows pathogens to deal with toxic compounds, including those with a synthetic origin as quinolones. | 2011 | 21687414 |
| 4833 | 9 | 0.9999 | Emerging mechanisms of fluoroquinolone resistance. Broad use of fluoroquinolones has been followed by emergence of resistance, which has been due mainly to chromosomal mutations in genes encoding the subunits of the drugs' target enzymes, DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, and in genes that affect the expression of diffusion channels in the outer membrane and multidrug-resistance efflux systems. Resistance emerged first in species in which single mutations were sufficient to cause clinically important levels of resistance (e.g., Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa). Subsequently, however, resistance has emerged in bacteria such as Campylobacter jejuni, Escherichia coli, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, in which multiple mutations are required to generate clinically important resistance. In these circumstances, the additional epidemiologic factors of drug use in animals and human-to-human spread appear to have contributed. Resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae, which is currently low, will require close monitoring as fluoroquinolones are used more extensively for treating respiratory tract infections. | 2001 | 11294736 |
| 4418 | 10 | 0.9999 | Bacterial resistance to tetracycline: mechanisms, transfer, and clinical significance. Tetracycline has been a widely used antibiotic because of its low toxicity and broad spectrum of activity. However, its clinical usefulness has been declining because of the appearance of an increasing number of tetracycline-resistant isolates of clinically important bacteria. Two types of resistance mechanisms predominate: tetracycline efflux and ribosomal protection. A third mechanism of resistance, tetracycline modification, has been identified, but its clinical relevance is still unclear. For some tetracycline resistance genes, expression is regulated. In efflux genes found in gram-negative enteric bacteria, regulation is via a repressor that interacts with tetracycline. Gram-positive efflux genes appear to be regulated by an attenuation mechanism. Recently it was reported that at least one of the ribosome protection genes is regulated by attenuation. Tetracycline resistance genes are often found on transmissible elements. Efflux resistance genes are generally found on plasmids, whereas genes involved in ribosome protection have been found on both plasmids and self-transmissible chromosomal elements (conjugative transposons). One class of conjugative transposon, originally found in streptococci, can transfer itself from streptococci to a variety of recipients, including other gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative bacteria, and mycoplasmas. Another class of conjugative transposons has been found in the Bacteroides group. An unusual feature of the Bacteroides elements is that their transfer is enhanced by preexposure to tetracycline. Thus, tetracycline has the double effect of selecting for recipients that acquire a resistance gene and stimulating transfer of the gene. | 1992 | 1423217 |
| 4241 | 11 | 0.9999 | Mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance and implications for epidemiology. The development of antibacterial agents has provided a means of treating bacterial diseases which were, previously, often fatal in both man and animal and thus represents one of the major advances of the 20th century. However, the efficacy of these agents is increasingly being compromised by the development of bacterial resistance to the drugs currently available for therapeutic use. Bacterial resistance can be combated in two ways. New drugs to which bacteria are susceptible can be developed and policies to contain the development and spread of resistance can be implemented. Both strategies require an understanding of the mechanisms of drug resistance, its epidemiology and the role of environmental factors in promoting resistance. Over the past thirty years our knowledge of bacterial resistance has increased dramatically mainly due to new technology that has become available. Bacteria are able to resist antibacterials by a variety of mechanisms: for example, altering the target to decrease susceptibility to the antibacterial, inactivating or destroying the drug, reducing drug transport into the cell or metabolic bypass. These drug resistance determinants are mediated via one of two distinct genetic mechanisms, a mutation in the bacterial chromosome or by a transmissible element; either a plasmid or a transposon. Significant differences exist between these two types of drug resistance as transmissible resistance, which is mainly plasmid-mediated, permits intraspecies and even interspecies transfer to occur. In contrast, chromosomal resistance can only be passed on to progeny. Transmissible antibacterial resistance is the major cause of concern as it can lead to the rapid spread of antibacterial resistance and has proven difficult, if not impossible, to eradicate. Furthermore, plasmids and transposons can code for multiple antibiotic resistance as well as virulence genes. Antibacterials for which transferable resistance has been identified include most commonly used antibacterials such as beta-lactams, aminoglycosides, macrolides, sulphonamides, tetracyclines, chloramphenicol and trimethoprim. One notable exception is the 4-quinolones for which plasmid-mediated resistance has yet to be identified. | 1993 | 8212509 |
| 4425 | 12 | 0.9999 | Multidrug resistance in bacteria. Large amounts of antibiotics used for human therapy, as well as for farm animals and even for fish in aquaculture, resulted in the selection of pathogenic bacteria resistant to multiple drugs. Multidrug resistance in bacteria may be generated by one of two mechanisms. First, these bacteria may accumulate multiple genes, each coding for resistance to a single drug, within a single cell. This accumulation occurs typically on resistance (R) plasmids. Second, multidrug resistance may also occur by the increased expression of genes that code for multidrug efflux pumps, extruding a wide range of drugs. This review discusses our current knowledge on the molecular mechanisms involved in both types of resistance. | 2009 | 19231985 |
| 9279 | 13 | 0.9999 | Differential epigenetic compatibility of qnr antibiotic resistance determinants with the chromosome of Escherichia coli. Environmental bacteria harbor a plethora of genes that, upon their horizontal transfer to new hosts, may confer resistance to antibiotics, although the number of such determinants actually acquired by pathogenic bacteria is very low. The founder effect, fitness costs and ecological connectivity all influence the chances of resistance transfer being successful. We examined the importance of these bottlenecks using the family of quinolone resistance determinants Qnr. The results indicate the epigenetic compatibility of a determinant with the host genome to be of great importance in the acquisition and spread of resistance. A plasmid carrying the widely distributed QnrA determinant was stable in Escherichia coli, whereas the SmQnr determinant was unstable despite both proteins having very similar tertiary structures. This indicates that the fitness costs associated with the acquisition of antibiotic resistance may not derive from a non-specific metabolic burden, but from the acquired gene causing specific changes in bacterial metabolic and regulatory networks. The observed stabilization of the plasmid encoding SmQnr by chromosomal mutations, including a mutant lacking the global regulator H-NS, reinforces this idea. Since quinolones are synthetic antibiotics, and since the origin of QnrA is the environmental bacterium Shewanella algae, the role of QnrA in this organism is unlikely to be that of conferring resistance. Its evolution toward this may have occurred through mutations or because of an environmental change (exaptation). The present results indicate that the chromosomally encoded Qnr determinants of S. algae can confer quinolone resistance upon their transfer to E. coli without the need of any further mutation. These results suggest that exaptation is important in the evolution of antibiotic resistance. | 2012 | 22574114 |
| 4424 | 14 | 0.9999 | Gene transfer, gentamicin resistance and enterococci. Enterococci are versatile pathogens by virtue of their ability to exhibit low-level intrinsic resistance to clinically useful antibiotics and their tolerance to adverse environmental conditions. In the last 20 years these pathogens have become progressively more difficult to treat because of their aptitude for acquiring antibiotic-resistance genes. Of increasing concern is the rapid dissemination of the AAC6'-APH2" bi-functional aminoglycoside modifying enzyme. This enzyme confers high-level resistance to gentamicin and all other related aminoglycosides with the exception of streptomycin. The gene conferring this phenotype has been associated with both narrow and broad host range plasmids, and has recently been found on conjugative transposons. The nature of these conjugative elements raises the possibility of the resistance gene spreading to other pathogenic bacteria. | 1997 | 9261754 |
| 9827 | 15 | 0.9999 | Evolution of bacterial resistance to antibiotics during the last three decades. Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is often plasmid-mediated and the associated genes encoded by transposable elements. These elements play a central role in evolution by providing mechanisms for the generation of diversity and, in conjunction with DNA transfer systems, for the dissemination of resistances to other bacteria. At the University Hospital of Zaragoza, extensive efforts have been made to define both the dissemination and evolution of antibiotic resistance by studying the transferable R plasmids and transposable elements. Here we describe the research on bacterial resistance to antibiotics in which many authors listed in the references have participated. The aspects of bacterial resistance dealt with are: (i) transferable resistance mediated by R plasmids in Gram-negative bacteria, (ii) R plasmid-mediated resistance to apramycin and hygromycin in clinical strains, (iii) the transposon Tn1696 and the integron In4, (iv) expression of Escherichia coli resistance genes in Haemophilus influenzae, (v) aminoglycoside-modifying-enzymes in the genus Mycobacterium with no relation to resistance, and (vi) macrolide-resistance and new mechanisms developed by Gram-positive bacteria. | 1998 | 10943375 |
| 9276 | 16 | 0.9999 | In Vitro Assessment of the Fitness of Resistant M. tuberculosis Bacteria by Competition Assay. Bacteria become resistant by a number of different mechanisms, and these include mutation in chromosomal genes (1), acquisition of plasmids (2), insertion of bacteriophage, transposon or insertion sequence DNA (3-5), or gene mosaicism (6). There is a dogma that bacteria that become resistant pay a significant physiological price and that if antimicrobial prescribing is controlled it will result in the eradication of resistant organisms. There are only very few studies that investigate the physiology of resistance acquisition and these do show that a physiological price is paid for this change (7, 8). Once an organism acquires resistance through mutation, acquisition of resistance genes via plasmids, transposons and bacteriophages the initial physiological defect is compensated by the antibiotic selective pressure, which balances the physiological deficit imposed by the resistant mutation or additional DNA (8, 9). | 2001 | 21374423 |
| 4417 | 17 | 0.9998 | Genetic mobility and distribution of tetracycline resistance determinants. Since 1953, tetracycline-resistant bacteria have been found increasingly in humans, animals, food and the environment. Tetracycline resistance is normally due to the acquisition of new genes and is primarily due to either energy-dependent efflux of tetracycline or protection of the ribosomes from its action. Gram-negative efflux genes are frequently associated with conjugative plasmids, whereas Gram-positive efflux genes are often found on small mobilizable plasmids or in the chromosome. The ribosomal protection genes are generally associated with conjugative transposons which have a preference for the chromosome. Recently, tetracycline resistance genes have been found in the genera Mycobacterium, Nocardia, Streptomyces and Treponema. The Tet M determinant codes for a ribosomal protection protein which can be found in Gram-positive, Gram-negative, cell-wall-free, aerobic, anaerobic, pathogenic, opportunistic and normal flora species. This promiscuous nature may be correlated with its location on a conjugative transposon and its ability to cross most biochemical and physical barriers found in bacteria. The Tet B efflux determinant is unlike other efflux gene products because it confers resistance to tetracycline, doxycycline and minocycline and has the widest host range of all Gram-negative efflux determinants. We have hypothesized that mobility and the environment of the bacteria may help influence the ultimate host range of specific tet genes. If we are to reverse the trend towards increasingly antibiotic-resistant pathogenic bacteria, we will need to change how antibiotics are used in both human and animal health as well as food production. | 1997 | 9189643 |
| 4426 | 18 | 0.9998 | Microbial multidrug resistance. Multiresistance plasmids and transposons, the integrons, the co-amplification of several resistance genes or finally the accumulation of independent mutations can lead to microorganisms resistant to multiple drugs. On the other hand multidrug resistance is due to an efflux pump conferring resistance to unrelated drugs. These microbial efflux pumps are belonging to various transporter families and are often encoded in microbial genomes. There is mounting evidence that these efflux systems are responsible for clinical multidrug resistance in bacteria, yeasts and parasites. | 1997 | 18611799 |
| 4832 | 19 | 0.9998 | Antibiotic resistance of Pseudomonas species. Pseudomonas species are highly versatile organisms with genetic and physiologic capabilities that allow them to flourish in environments hostile to most pathogenic bacteria. Within the lung of the patient with cystic fibrosis, exposed to a number of antimicrobial agents, highly resistant clones of Pseudomonas are selected. These may have acquired plasmid-mediated genes encoding a variety of beta-lactamases or aminoglycoside modifying enzymes. Frequently these resistance determinants are on transposable elements, facilitating their dissemination among the population of bacteria. Mutations in chromosomal genes can also occur, resulting in constitutive expression of normally repressed enzymes, such as the chromosomal cephalosporinase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Pseudomonas cepacia. These enzymes may confer resistance to the expanded-spectrum beta-lactam drugs. Decreased cellular permeability to the beta-lactams and the aminoglycosides also results in clinically significant antibiotic resistance. The development of new drugs with anti-Pseudomonas activity, beta-lactam agents and the quinolones, has improved the potential for effective chemotherapy but has not surpassed the potential of the organisms to develop resistance. | 1986 | 3701534 |