• Title of article

    Bacterial resistance to antibiotics: Enzymatic degradation and modification

  • Author/Authors

    Wright، نويسنده , , Gerard D.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    20
  • From page
    1451
  • To page
    1470
  • Abstract
    Antibiotic resistance can occur via three general mechanisms: prevention of interaction of the drug with target, efflux of the antibiotic from the cell, and direct destruction or modification of the compound. This review discusses the latter mechanisms focusing on the chemical strategy of antibiotic inactivation; these include hydrolysis, group transfer, and redox mechanisms. While hydrolysis is especially important clinically, particularly as applied to β-lactam antibiotics, the group transfer approaches are the most diverse and include the modification by acyltransfer, phosphorylation, glycosylation, nucleotidylation, ribosylation, and thiol transfer. A unique feature of enzymes that physically modify antibiotics is that these mechanisms alone actively reduce the concentration of drugs in the local environment; therefore, they present a unique challenge to researchers and clinicians considering new approaches to anti-infective therapy. This review will present the current status of knowledge of these aspects of antibiotic resistance and discuss how a thorough understanding of resistance enzyme molecular mechanism, three-dimensional structure, and evolution can be leveraged in combating resistance.
  • Keywords
    antibiotic , resistance , Acetyltransferase , hydrolase , kinase , nucleotidyltransferase , Ribosyltransferase , redox
  • Journal title
    Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews
  • Record number

    1761566