Acquisition and Spread of Antimicrobial Resistance: A tet(X) Case Study

被引:27
作者
Aminov, Rustam [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Aberdeen, Sch Med Med Sci & Nutr, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland
[2] Kazan Fed Univ, Inst Fundamental Med & Biol, Kazan 420008, Russia
关键词
tetracyclines; next-generation tetracyclines; antimicrobial resistance; natural reservoirs; mobile genetic elements; horizontal gene transfer; RIEMERELLA-ANATIPESTIFER; ESCHERICHIA-COLI; DECREASED SUSCEPTIBILITY; ISCR ELEMENTS; EFFLUX PUMP; GENE; TIGECYCLINE; ACINETOBACTER; MONOOXYGENASE; MECHANISM;
D O I
10.3390/ijms22083905
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Understanding the mechanisms leading to the rise and dissemination of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is crucially important for the preservation of power of antimicrobials and controlling infectious diseases. Measures to monitor and detect AMR, however, have been significantly delayed and introduced much later after the beginning of industrial production and consumption of antimicrobials. However, monitoring and detection of AMR is largely focused on bacterial pathogens, thus missing multiple key events which take place before the emergence and spread of AMR among the pathogens. In this regard, careful analysis of AMR development towards recently introduced antimicrobials may serve as a valuable example for the better understanding of mechanisms driving AMR evolution. Here, the example of evolution of tet(X), which confers resistance to the next-generation tetracyclines, is summarised and discussed. Initial mechanisms of resistance to these antimicrobials among pathogens were mostly via chromosomal mutations leading to the overexpression of efflux pumps. High-level resistance was achieved only after the acquisition of flavin-dependent monooxygenase-encoding genes from the environmental microbiota. These genes confer resistance to all tetracyclines, including the next-generation tetracyclines, and thus were termed tet(X). ISCR2 and IS26, as well as a variety of conjugative and mobilizable plasmids of different incompatibility groups, played an essential role in the acquisition of tet(X) genes from natural reservoirs and in further dissemination among bacterial commensals and pathogens. This process, which took place within the last decade, demonstrates how rapidly AMR evolution may progress, taking away some drugs of last resort from our arsenal.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]   Evolution in action: dissemination of tet(X) into pathogenic microbiota [J].
Aminov, Rustam I. .
FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2013, 4
[2]   Horizontal gene exchange in environmental microbiota [J].
Aminov, Rustam I. .
FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2011, 2
[3]   The role of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance in nature [J].
Aminov, Rustam I. .
ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2009, 11 (12) :2970-2988
[4]   Monooxygenase-like sequence of a Rhodococcus equi gene conferring increased resistance to rifampin by inactivating this antibiotic [J].
Andersen, SJ ;
Quan, S ;
Gowan, B ;
Dabbs, ER .
ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, 1997, 41 (01) :218-221
[5]  
Andrei Stefan, 2019, Discoveries (Craiova), V7, pe102, DOI 10.15190/d.2019.15
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1997, DIS POULTRY
[7]   Detection of plasmid-mediated tigecycline-resistant gene tet(X4) in Escherichia coli from pork, Sichuan and Shandong Provinces, China, February 2019 [J].
Bai, Li ;
Du, Pengcheng ;
Du, Yinju ;
Sun, Honghu ;
Zhang, Pei ;
Wan, Yuping ;
Lin, Qi ;
Fanning, Seamus ;
Cui, Shenghui ;
Wu, Yongning .
EUROSURVEILLANCE, 2019, 24 (25) :2-5
[8]  
Benndorf D., 2017, SCI REP-UK, V7, P1
[9]   Comprehensive screening of genomic and metagenomic data reveals a large diversity of tetracycline resistance genes [J].
Berglund, Fanny ;
Bohm, Maria-Elisabeth ;
Martinsson, Anton ;
Ebmeyer, Stefan ;
Osterlund, Tobias ;
Johnning, Anna ;
Larsson, D. G. Joakim ;
Kristiansson, Erik .
MICROBIAL GENOMICS, 2020, 6 (11) :1-14
[10]   Bad Bugs, No Drugs: No ESKAPE! An Update from the Infectious Diseases Society of America [J].
Boucher, Helen W. ;
Talbot, George H. ;
Bradley, John S. ;
Edwards, John E., Jr. ;
Gilbert, David ;
Rice, Louis B. ;
Scheld, Michael ;
Spellberg, Brad ;
Bartlett, John .
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2009, 48 (01) :1-12