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Treatment of infections is compromised worldwide by the emergence of bacteria that are resistant to multiple antibiotics. Although classically attributed to chromosomal mutations, resistance is most commonly associated with extrachromosomal elements acquired from other bacteria in the environment. These include different types of mobile DNA segments, such as plasmids, transposons, and integrons. However, intrinsic mechanisms not commonly specified by mobile elementssuch as efflux pumps that expel multiple kinds of antibioticsare now recognized as major contributors to multidrug resistance in bacteria. Once established, multidrug-resistant organisms persist and spread worldwide, causing clinical failures in the treatment of infections and public health crises.
Efforts aimed at identifying new antibiotics were once a top research and development priority among pharmaceutical companies. The potent broad spectrum drugs that emerged from these endeavors provided extraordinary clinical efficacy. Success, however, has been compromised. We are now faced with a long list of microbes that have found ways to circumvent different structural classes of drugs and are no longer susceptible to most, if not all, therapeutic regimens.
The means that microbes use to evade antibiotics certainly predate and outnumber the therapeutic interventions themselves. In a recent collection of soil-dwelling Streptomyces (the producers of many clinical therapeutic agents), every organism was multidrug resistant. Most were resistant to at least seven different antibiotics, and the phenotype of some included resistance to 1521 different drugs (DCosta et al., 2006). Moreover, many isolates were resistant to daptomycin, quinupristin-dalfopristin, and telithromycinall drugs approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) within the last decadeas well as purely synthetic agents such as ciprofloxacin. These data not only suggest that our surroundings can act as a reservoir for new (and old) resistance mechanisms, but that the drugs we use to treat infectious diseases have long-lasting effects outside of the hospital. Many antimicrobial molecules exist for millennia stably within the environment (Cook et al., 1989), where they select and promote growth of resistant strains.
Resistance to single antibiotics became prominent in organisms that encountered the first commercially produced antibiotics. The most notable example is resistance to penicillin among staphylococci, specified by an enzyme (penicillinase) that degraded the antibiotic (Barber, 1947). Over the years, continued selective pressure by different drugs has resulted in organisms bearing additional kinds of resistance mechanisms that led to multidrug resistance (MDR)novel penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), enzymatic mechanisms of drug modification, mutated drug targets, enhanced efflux pump expression, and altered membrane permeability. Some of the most problematic MDR organisms that are encountered currently include Pseudomonas aeruginosa (another microbe of soil origin), Acinetobacter baumannii, Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae bearing extended-spectrum â-lactamases (ESBL), vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant MRSA, and extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Table 1). Some like methicillin-resistant S. aureus couple MDR with exceptional virulence capabilities (Miller et al., 2005). Others, including some strains of P. aeruginosa, A. baumannii, and K. pneumoniae, manage to evade every drug within the physicians arsenal (Levin et al., 1999).