11 Mechanisms of drug resistance Flashcards

1
Q

Bacterial Resistance Mechanisms

A
  • Microorganisms have various mechanisms that counter anti-microbial agents
  • 4 main mechanisms/strategies exist:
    • Inhibition of drug uptake into bacterial cell
      • modify porin channel, making it smaller keeping drugs like:
        • Aminoglycosides (kept out by gram negatives)
        • Quinolones (kept out by gram negatives)
        • Beta-lactams (now cant get to PBPs)
        • Pseudomonas aeruginosa against imipenem
        • Vancomycin intermediate S.aureus (VISA)* strains with thickened cell wall against vancomycin- trapping it
        • ​Vancomycin-resistant Staph aureus (VRSA) * changes D-ala-D-ala to D- ala-D-lactate in pentapeptide chain via VanA gene transfered by vancomycin resistant enterococcus
        • Resistance of Enterococci to vancomycin*
      • Expulsion of drug from bacterial cell via efflux pumps, pumping out:
        • macrolides (staphylocci)
        • lincosamides
        • steptogramins (staphylocci)
        • tetracyclines (e. coli and other enterobacteriaceae)
        • fluoroquinolones- the drugs ending in floxicin (Staph aureus & Streptococcus)
      • Inactivation of drug via modification or degradation
        • Against beta-lactam drugs (via beta-lactamase enzyme*)
          • penicillins and cephalosporins
          • extended-spectrum beta-lactamases
        • chloramphenicol (via acetyltransferase enzyme produced by many enterobacteriaceae)
        • aminoglycosides (by prosphorylases, adenylases and acetylases via gram negative and gram positive bacteria)
        • inactivated penicilloic acid cannot bind to PBPs (penicillin binding proteins
      • Modifying drug target within bacterial cell
        • Alteration in PBPs leading to reduced affinity of beta lactum drugs*
          • Methicillin-resistant Staph aureus * - encodes mecA gene
            • _​and oxacillin*_
          • Streptococcus pneumoniae**, Group A streptococci resistance to penicillin**
          • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
          • Listeria monocytogenes
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2
Q

intrinsically resistant to Penicillins

A

intrinsically resistant to Penicillins

Mycoplasma

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3
Q

Plasmid-mediated Drug resistance**

A

Plasmid-mediated Drug resistance**

  • The genes that determine this resistance are located on plasmids
  • Often these genes code for enzymes that modify the drug
  • R factors are conjugative plasmids carrying genes for Drug resistance
  • How do plasmids carrying resistance to multiple drugs arise ?
    • Transposons/gene cassettes

note:

An R plasmid consists of a resistance transfer factor (RTF), which enables conjugation, and one or more r-determinants: genes conferring resistance to antibiotics.

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4
Q

Transposon * (drug resistance)

A

Transposon * (drug resistance)

  • Insertion sequences + one other gene (at least)
  • Include some genes for drug resistance
  • Play an important role in building multiple drug resistance plasmids *
  • They may also move to the chromosome (not frequently)
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5
Q

Staphylococcus aureus resistance

A

Staphylococcus aureus resistance to Penicillin

  • Mechanism of resistance to penicillin – production of **Penicillinase enzyme* **(a beta-lactamase enzyme)
  • The gene for Beta-lactamase is part of a Transposable element located on a large plasmid, often with other antimicrobial resistance genes (eg. Gentamicin and erythromycin)
  • Spread of penicillin resistance primarily occurs by spread of resistant strains
  • At present – more than 90% Staph isolates resistant*
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6
Q

mechanism resistance against Chloramphenicol

A

mechanism resistance against Chloramphenicol

Production of acetyltransferase

  • Inactivation of drug by acetylation
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