# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 9153 | 0 | 1.0000 | Mycoplasma Contamination of Cell Cultures: Vesicular Traffic in Bacteria and Control over Infectious Agents. Cell cultures are subject to contamination either with cells of other cultures or with microorganisms, including fungi, viruses, and bacteria. Mycoplasma contamination of cell cultures is of particular importance. Since cell cultures are used for the production of vaccines and physiologically active compounds, designing a system for controlling contaminants becomes topical for fundamental science and biotechnological production. The discovery of extracellular membrane vesicles in mycoplasmas makes it necessary to take into consideration the bacterial vesicular traffic in systems designed for controlling infectious agents. The extracellular vesicles of bacteria mediate the traffic of proteins and genes, participate in cell-to-cell interactions, as well as in the pathogenesis and development of resistance to antibiotics. The present review discusses the features of mycoplasmas, their extracellular vesicles, and the interaction between contaminants and eukaryotic cells. Furthermore, it provides an analysis of the problems associated with modern methods of diagnosis and eradication of mycoplasma contamination from cell cultures and prospects for their solution. | 2014 | 25349713 |
| 9427 | 1 | 0.9998 | Polysaccharides' Structures and Functions in Biofilm Architecture of Antimicrobial-Resistant (AMR) Pathogens. Bacteria and fungi have developed resistance to the existing therapies such as antibiotics and antifungal drugs, and multiple mechanisms are mediating this resistance. Among these, the formation of an extracellular matrix embedding different bacterial cells, called biofilm, is an effective strategy through which bacterial and fungal cells are establishing a relationship in a unique environment. The biofilm provides them the possibility to transfer genes conferring resistance, to prevent them from desiccation and to impede the penetration of antibiotics or antifungal drugs. Biofilms are formed of several constituents including extracellular DNA, proteins and polysaccharides. Depending on the bacteria, different polysaccharides form the biofilm matrix in different microorganisms, some of them involved in the first stage of cells' attachment to surfaces and to each other, and some responsible for giving the biofilm structure resistance and stability. In this review, we describe the structure and the role of different polysaccharides in bacterial and fungal biofilms, we revise the analytical methods to characterize them quantitatively and qualitatively and finally we provide an overview of potential new antimicrobial therapies able to inhibit biofilm formation by targeting exopolysaccharides. | 2023 | 36835442 |
| 9140 | 2 | 0.9998 | Polyamine as a microenvironment factor in resistance to antibiotics. One of the main issues in modern medicine is the decrease in the efficacy of antibiotic therapy against resistant microorganisms. The advent of antimicrobial resistance has added significantly to the impact of infectious diseases, in number of infections, as well as added healthcare costs. The development of antibiotic tolerance and resistance is influenced by a variety of environmental variables, and it is important to identify these environmental factors as part of any strategy for combating antibiotic resistance. The review aims to emphasize that biogenic polyamines are one of such environmental cues that impacts the antibiotic resistance in bacteria. The biogenic polyamines can help bacteria acquire resistance to antibiotics either by regulating the level of number of porin channels in the outer membrane, by modifying the outer membrane liposaccharides or by protecting macromolecule from antibiotic stress. Thus, understanding the way polyamines function in bacteria can thus be beneficial while designing the drugs to combat diseases. | 2024 | 37339480 |
| 9131 | 3 | 0.9998 | How do antibiotic-producing bacteria ensure their self-resistance before antibiotic biosynthesis incapacitates them? Acquired antibiotic resistance among dangerous bacterial pathogens is an increasing medical problem. While in Mycobacterium tuberculosis this occurs by mutation in the genes encoding the targets for antibiotic action, other pathogens have generally gained their resistance genes by horizontal gene transfer from non-pathogenic bacteria. The ultimate source of many of these genes is almost certainly the actinomycetes that make the antibiotics and therefore need self-protective mechanisms to avoid suicide. How do they ensure that they are resistant at the time when intracellular antibiotic concentrations reach potentially lethal levels? In this issue of Molecular Microbiology, Tahlan et al. describe a solution to this problem in which an antibiotically inactive precursor of a Streptomyces coelicolor antibiotic induces resistance -- in this example by means of a trans-membrane export pump -- so that the organism is already primed for resistance at the time when it is needed. The authors generalize their interpretation to other cases where antibiotic resistance depends on export, but it will be interesting to find out whether it could in fact apply more widely, to include the other major mechanisms of resistance: target modification and the synthesis of antibiotics via a series of chemically modified intermediates, with removal of the protective group at the time of secretion into the outside medium. | 2007 | 17238916 |
| 8342 | 4 | 0.9998 | Inflammatory immunity and bacteriological perspectives: A new direction for copper treatment of sepsis. Copper is an essential trace element for all aerobic organisms because of its unique biological functions. In recent years, researchers have discovered that copper can induce cell death through various regulatory mechanisms, thereby inducing inflammation. Efforts have also been made to alter the chemical structure of copper to achieve either anticancer or anti-inflammatory effects. The copper ion can exhibit bactericidal effects by interfering with the integrity of the cell membrane and promoting oxidative stress. Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response caused by infection. Some studies have revealed that copper is involved in the pathophysiological process of sepsis and is closely related to its prognosis. During the infection of sepsis, the body may enhance the antimicrobial effect by increasing the release of copper. However, to avoid copper poisoning, all organisms have evolved copper resistance genes. Therefore, further analysis of the complex relationship between copper and bacteria may provide new ideas and research directions for the treatment of sepsis. | 2024 | 38692229 |
| 8343 | 5 | 0.9998 | Bacterial Stress Responses as Potential Targets in Overcoming Antibiotic Resistance. Bacteria can be adapted to adverse and detrimental conditions that induce general and specific responses to DNA damage as well as acid, heat, cold, starvation, oxidative, envelope, and osmotic stresses. The stress-triggered regulatory systems are involved in bacterial survival processes, such as adaptation, physiological changes, virulence potential, and antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic susceptibility to several antibiotics is reduced due to the activation of stress responses in cellular physiology by the stimulation of resistance mechanisms, the promotion of a resistant lifestyle (biofilm or persistence), and/or the induction of resistance mutations. Hence, the activation of bacterial stress responses poses a serious threat to the efficacy and clinical success of antibiotic therapy. Bacterial stress responses can be potential targets for therapeutic alternatives to antibiotics. An understanding of the regulation of stress response in association with antibiotic resistance provides useful information for the discovery of novel antimicrobial adjuvants and the development of effective therapeutic strategies to control antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Therefore, this review discusses bacterial stress responses linked to antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria and also provides information on novel therapies targeting bacterial stress responses that have been identified as potential candidates for the effective control of Gram-negative antibiotic-resistant bacteria. | 2022 | 35889104 |
| 8290 | 6 | 0.9998 | Antimicrobial Peptides: Features, Action, and Their Resistance Mechanisms in Bacteria. In recent years, because of increased resistance to conventional antimicrobials, many researchers have started to study the synthesis of new antibiotics to control the disease-causing effects of infectious pathogens. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are among the newest antibiotics; these peptides are integral compounds in all kinds of organisms and play a significant role in microbial ecology, and critically contribute to the innate immunity of organisms by destroying invading microorganisms. Moreover, AMPs may encourage cells to produce chemokines, stimulate angiogenesis, accelerate wound healing, and influence programmed cell death in multicellular organisms. Bacteria differ in their inherent susceptibility and resistance mechanisms to these peptides when responding to the antimicrobial effects of AMPs. Generally, the development of AMP resistance mechanisms is driven by direct competition between bacterial species, and host and pathogen interactions. Several studies have shown diverse mechanisms of bacterial resistance to AMPs, for example, some bacteria produce proteases and trapping proteins; some modify cell surface charge, change membrane fluidity, and activate efflux pumps; and some species make use of biofilms and exopolymers, and develop sensing systems by selective gene expression. A closer understanding of bacterial resistance mechanisms may help in developing novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of infections caused by pathogenic organisms that are successful in developing extensive resistance to AMPs. Based on these observations, this review discusses the properties of AMPs, their targeting mechanisms, and bacterial resistance mechanisms against AMPs. | 2018 | 29957118 |
| 9133 | 7 | 0.9998 | Overcoming antimicrobial resistance by targeting resistance mechanisms. Three mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance predominate in bacteria: antibiotic inactivation, target site modification, and altered uptake by way of restricted entry and/or enhanced efflux. Many of these involve enzymes or transport proteins whose activity can be targeted directly in an attemptto compromise resistance and, thus, potentiate antimicrobial activity. Alternatively, novel agents unaffected by these resistance mechanisms can be developed. Given the ongoing challenge posed by antimicrobial resistance in bacteria, targeting resistance in this way may be our best hope at prolonging the antibiotic era. | 2001 | 11291743 |
| 9541 | 8 | 0.9998 | The Role of the Hfq Protein in Bacterial Resistance to Antibiotics: A Narrative Review. The antibiotic resistance of pathogenic microorganisms is currently one of most major medical problems, causing a few million deaths every year worldwide due to untreatable bacterial infections. Unfortunately, the prognosis is even worse, as over 8 million deaths associated with antibiotic resistance are expected to occur in 2050 if no new effective antibacterial treatments are discovered. The Hfq protein has been discovered as a bacterial RNA chaperone. However, subsequent studies have indicated that this small protein (composed of 102 amino acid residues in Escherichia coli) has more activities, including binding to DNA and influencing its compaction, interaction with biological membranes, formation of amyloid-like structures, and others. Although Hfq is known to participate in many cellular processes, perhaps surprisingly, only reports from recent years have demonstrated its role in bacterial antibiotic resistance. The aim of this narrative review is to discuss how can Hfq affects antibiotic resistance in bacteria and propose how this knowledge may facilitate developing new therapeutic strategies against pathogenic bacteria. We indicate that the mechanisms by which the Hfq protein modulates the response of bacterial cells to antibiotics are quite different, from the regulation of the expression of genes coding for proteins directly involved in antibiotic transportation or action, through direct effects on membranes, to controlling the replication or transposition of mobile genetic elements bearing antibiotic resistance genes. Therefore, we suggest that Hfq could be considered a potential target for novel antimicrobial compounds. We also discuss difficulties in developing such drugs, but since Hfq appears to be a promising target for drugs that may enhance the efficacy of antibiotics, we propose that works on such potential therapeutics are encouraged. | 2025 | 40005731 |
| 9154 | 9 | 0.9998 | Interactions of plasma-activated water with biofilms: inactivation, dispersal effects and mechanisms of action. Biofilms have several characteristics that ensure their survival in a range of adverse environmental conditions, including high cell numbers, close cell proximity to allow easy genetic exchange (e.g., for resistance genes), cell communication and protection through the production of an exopolysaccharide matrix. Together, these characteristics make it difficult to kill undesirable biofilms, despite the many studies aimed at improving the removal of biofilms. An elimination method that is safe, easy to deliver in physically complex environments and not prone to microbial resistance is highly desired. Cold atmospheric plasma, a lightning-like state generated from air or other gases with a high voltage can be used to make plasma-activated water (PAW) that contains many active species and radicals that have antimicrobial activity. Recent studies have shown the potential for PAW to be used for biofilm elimination without causing the bacteria to develop significant resistance. However, the precise mode of action is still the subject of debate. This review discusses the formation of PAW generated species and their impacts on biofilms. A focus is placed on the diffusion of reactive species into biofilms, the formation of gradients and the resulting interaction with the biofilm matrix and specific biofilm components. Such an understanding will provide significant benefits for tackling the ubiquitous problem of biofilm contamination in food, water and medical areas. | 2021 | 33504802 |
| 9430 | 10 | 0.9998 | Mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance in biofilms. Most bacteria in nature exist in aggregated communities known as biofilms, and cells within a biofilm demonstrate major physiological changes compared to their planktonic counterparts. Biofilms are associated with many different types of infections which can have severe impacts on patients. Infections involving a biofilm component are often chronic and highly recalcitrant to antibiotic therapy as a result of intrinsic physical factors including extracellular matrix production, low growth rates, altered antibiotic target production and efficient exchange of resistance genes. This review describes the biofilm lifecycle, phenotypic characteristics of a biofilm, and contribution of matrix and persister cells to biofilms intrinsic tolerance to antimicrobials. We also describe how biofilms can evolve antibiotic resistance and transfer resistance genes within biofilms. Multispecies biofilms and the impacts of various interactions, including cooperation and competition, between species on tolerance to antimicrobials in polymicrobial biofilm communities are also discussed. | 2024 | 39364333 |
| 9127 | 11 | 0.9997 | Antimicrobial Peptides: Virulence and Resistance Modulation in Gram-Negative Bacteria. Growing resistance to antibiotics is one of the biggest threats to human health. One of the possibilities to overcome this resistance is to use and develop alternative molecules such as antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). However, an increasing number of studies have shown that bacterial resistance to AMPs does exist. Since AMPs are immunity molecules, it is important to ensure that their potential therapeutic use is not harmful in the long term. Recently, several studies have focused on the adaptation of Gram-negative bacteria to subinhibitory concentrations of AMPs. Such concentrations are commonly found in vivo and in the environment. It is therefore necessary to understand how bacteria detect and respond to low concentrations of AMPs. This review focuses on recent findings regarding the impact of subinhibitory concentrations of AMPs on the modulation of virulence and resistance in Gram-negative bacteria. | 2020 | 32092866 |
| 9542 | 12 | 0.9997 | Development of quorum-based anti-virulence therapeutics targeting Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. Quorum sensing is a cell density-dependent signaling phenomenon used by bacteria for coordination of population-wide phenotypes, such as expression of virulence genes, antibiotic resistance and biofilm formation. Lately, disruption of bacterial communication has emerged as an anti-virulence strategy with enormous therapeutic potential given the increasing incidences of drug resistance in pathogenic bacteria. The quorum quenching therapeutic approach promises a lower risk of resistance development, since interference with virulence generally does not affect the growth and fitness of the bacteria and, hence, does not exert an associated selection pressure for drug-resistant strains. With better understanding of bacterial communication networks and mechanisms, many quorum quenching methods have been developed against various clinically significant bacterial pathogens. In particular, Gram-negative bacteria are an important group of pathogens, because, collectively, they are responsible for the majority of hospital-acquired infections. Here, we discuss the current understanding of existing quorum sensing mechanisms and present important inhibitory strategies that have been developed against this group of pathogenic bacteria. | 2013 | 23939429 |
| 9582 | 13 | 0.9997 | Humans and Microbes: A Systems Theory Perspective on Coevolution. The issue of rapid adaptation of microorganisms to changing environments is examined. The mechanism of adaptive mutations is analyzed. The possibility that horizontal gene transfer is a random process is discussed. Bacteria, unicellular fungi, and other microorganisms successfully adapt to fast-changing conditions (such as exposure to drugs) because their evolution is not a random process. Adaptation to antibiotics, adaptive mutations, and related phenomena occur because microbial evolution is inherently directed and purposefully oriented toward potential external changes. Rejecting gene-centricity plays a crucial role in understanding the coevolution of humans and pathogens. This means that beyond genes, there exists a higher-level system-an organism with its own unique properties that cannot be reduced to genes. The problem of human adaptation to infectious agents (viruses, bacteria, and protozoa) is also analyzed. Based on general systems theory, it is concluded that humans and pathogens coevolve in a controlled manner. | 2025 | 41176022 |
| 9151 | 14 | 0.9997 | Bacterial exo-polysaccharides in biofilms: role in antimicrobial resistance and treatments. BACKGROUND: Bacterial biofilms are aggregation or collection of different bacterial cells which are covered by self-produced extracellular matrix and are attached to a substratum. Generally, under stress or in unfavorable conditions, free planktonic bacteria transform themselves into bacterial biofilms and become sessile. MAIN BODY: Various mechanisms involving interaction between antimicrobial and biofilm matrix components, reduced growth rates, and genes conferring antibiotic resistance have been described to contribute to enhanced resistance. Quorum sensing and multi-drug resistance efflux pumps are known to regulate the internal environment within the biofilm as well as biofilm formation; they also protect cells from antibiotic attack or immune attacks. This review summarizes data supporting the importance of exopolysaccharides during biofilm formation and its role in antibiotic resistance. CONCLUSIONS: Involvement of quorum sensing and efflux pumps in antibiotic resistance in association with exopolysaccharides. Also, strategies to overcome or attack biofilms are provided. | 2021 | 34557983 |
| 9137 | 15 | 0.9997 | Virulence- and antibiotic resistance-associated two-component signal transduction systems of Gram-positive pathogenic bacteria as targets for antimicrobial therapy. Two-component signal transduction systems are central elements of the virulence and antibiotic resistance responses of opportunistic bacterial pathogens. These systems allow the bacterium to sense and respond to signals emanating from the host environment and to modulate the repertoire of genes expressed to allow invasion and growth in the host. The integral role of two-component systems in virulence and antibiotic sensitivity, and the existence of essential two-component systems in several pathogenic bacteria, suggests that these systems may be novel targets for antimicrobial intervention. This review discusses the potential use of two-component systems as targets for antimicrobial therapy against Gram-positive pathogens and the current status in the development of inhibitors specific for these systems. | 2002 | 12191621 |
| 9132 | 16 | 0.9997 | Antibiotic resistance: a survival strategy. Antibiotics are natural, semi-synthetic, or synthetic molecules that target the cell wall of bacteria, DNA replication, RNA transcription, or mRNA translation, the cellular machinery responsible for the synthesis of precursor molecules. Bacteria have evolved and adopted numerous strategies to counteract the action of antibiotics. Antibiotic resistance is intrinsic and an inherent characteristic of the microorganism. Intrinsic resistance is due to cell wall impermeability, efflux, biofilm formation, and the expression of genes mediating inactivating enzymes. Antibiotic resistance can also arise by the acquisition of extracellular DNA and is expressed phenotypically as efflux, modification or acquisition of target sites, and enzymatic inactivation of the antibiotic. Not only have bacteria acquired the mechanisms necessary to withstand the effects of antibiotics, they have also acquired elaborate mechanisms to mobilize and disseminate these successful strategies: plasmids, transposons, insertion sequences, and cassettes. Antibiotic resistance is a major worldwide clinical problem of public health concern because of the reduced efficacy caused by the various mechanisms of resistance. Global strategies are emerging to help address this critical problem. | 2005 | 16134477 |
| 9598 | 17 | 0.9997 | Strategies and molecular tools to fight antimicrobial resistance: resistome, transcriptome, and antimicrobial peptides. The increasing number of antibiotic resistant bacteria motivates prospective research toward discovery of new antimicrobial active substances. There are, however, controversies concerning the cost-effectiveness of such research with regards to the description of new substances with novel cellular interactions, or description of new uses of existing substances to overcome resistance. Although examination of bacteria isolated from remote locations with limited exposure to humans has revealed an absence of antibiotic resistance genes, it is accepted that these genes were both abundant and diverse in ancient living organisms, as detected in DNA recovered from Pleistocene deposits (30,000 years ago). Indeed, even before the first clinical use of antibiotics more than 60 years ago, resistant organisms had been isolated. Bacteria can exhibit different strategies for resistance against antibiotics. New genetic information may lead to the modification of protein structure affecting the antibiotic carriage into the cell, enzymatic inactivation of drugs, or even modification of cellular structure interfering in the drug-bacteria interaction. There are still plenty of new genes out there in the environment that can be appropriated by putative pathogenic bacteria to resist antimicrobial agents. On the other hand, there are several natural compounds with antibiotic activity that may be used to oppose them. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are molecules which are wide-spread in all forms of life, from multi-cellular organisms to bacterial cells used to interfere with microbial growth. Several AMPs have been shown to be effective against multi-drug resistant bacteria and have low propensity to resistance development, probably due to their unique mode of action, different from well-known antimicrobial drugs. These substances may interact in different ways with bacterial cell membrane, protein synthesis, protein modulation, and protein folding. The analysis of bacterial transcriptome may contribute to the understanding of microbial strategies under different environmental stresses and allows the understanding of their interaction with novel AMPs. | 2013 | 24427156 |
| 9429 | 18 | 0.9997 | Basic features of biofilms--why are they difficult therapeutic targets? The purpose of this paper is to review the basic features of biofilms associated with human infections and summarize why such biofilms are resistant to antimicrobial agents. The formation of most biofilms involves adherence of bacteria to a conditioned surface, growth and division of the attached bacteria, synthesis of a polymeric slime matrix, formation of a structured microbial community, and incorporation of other micro-organisms into the microbial mass. The transition of bacteria from free-floating (planktonic) to biofilm environments involves extensive up-regulation of genes associated with adherence. Micro-organisms in established biofilms engage in complex integrated activities involving activation and deactivation of genes that promote the survival of bacteria within the biofilm community. Mechanisms of the increased resistance of biofilm bacteria to antimicrobial agents may involve: (1) neutralization or consumption of the drug, (2) failure of the drug to completely penetrate the biofilm, (3) inability of the drug to affect metabolically inactive bacteria, and (4) presence of drug-resistant bacteria within biofilms. | 2004 | 16479852 |
| 9623 | 19 | 0.9997 | Prokaryotic toxin-antitoxin systems--the role in bacterial physiology and application in molecular biology. Bacteria have developed multiple complex mechanisms ensuring an adequate response to environmental changes. In this context, bacterial cell division and growth are subject to strict control to ensure metabolic balance and cell survival. A plethora of studies cast light on toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems as metabolism regulators acting in response to environmental stress conditions. Many of those studies suggest direct relations between the TA systems and the pathogenic potential or antibiotic resistance of relevant bacteria. Other studies point out that TA systems play a significant role in ensuring stability of mobile genetic material. The evolutionary origin and relations between various TA systems are still a subject of a debate. The impact of toxin-antitoxin systems on bacteria physiology prompted their application in molecular biology as tools allowing cloning of some hard-to-maintain genes, plasmid maintenance and production of recombinant proteins. | 2011 | 21394325 |