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MECHANISMS OF DRUG RESISTANCE Dr.Ihsan Edan Alsaimary Dept.Microbiology , College Of Medicine , University Of Basrah INTRODUCTION • Chemotherapy is the primary means of treating bacterial infections. • Successful chemotherapy depends in a large part on the ability to exploit metabolic differences between the pathogen and the host. • A problem confronting chemotherapy is the ability of the pathogen to mutate and become drug resistance. Why Is Antibiotic Resistance A Public Health Issue? • No new classes of antibiotics have been developed to combat infectious diseases since 1970. Research and development of antibiotics takes 10 to 20 years (WHO 2000). • For example, Shigella dysenteriae, which claimed the lives of more than 2.2 million people in 1998, has become resistant to every available drug except ciprofloxacin within the past ten years. • Even non-pathogenic resistant bacteria can pass resistance genes to pathogenic bacteria by processes such as conjugation. Antibiotics in Animal Feed • Promotes growth • Decreases amount of feed needed • Prevents infectious diseases • Facilitates confinement housing • Lowers costs ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE: The role of animal feed antibiotic additives • 48% of all antibiotics by weight is added to animal feeds to promote growth. Results in low, subtherapeutic levels which are thought to promote resistance. • Farm families who own chickens feed tetracycline have an increased incidence of tetracycline resistant fecal flora • Chickens at Spanish supermarkets have >90% of cultured campylobacter resistant to quinolones • 39% of enterococci in the fecal flora of pigs from the Netherlands is resistant to vancomycin vs 0% in Sweden. (Sweden bans antibiotic additives in animal feed) What Are Sub-therapeutic Antibiotics? • In modern large-scale agriculture, chickens, pigs, and other livestock are often given sub-therapeutic doses of antibiotics as a prophylactic and as a growth promoter. • When antibiotics are administered at sub-therapeutic doses, the hardiest bacteria will survive treatment and reproduce to create an increasingly resistant population of bacteria. What is MRSA? • Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic bacterium that lives on the skin and in the nasal passages of people and animals. • S. aureus can become resistant to methicillin by acquiring the mecA gene. MecA positive strains are the main cause of nosocomial infections worldwide. • There is concern that feeding antibiotics to animals subtherapeutically can promote the development and growth of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). • According to recent publications, pets and farm animals and their caretakers can act as reservoirs of MRSA (Corrente). The magic bullet • Antibiotics revolutionised medicine • The first antibiotic, penicillin, was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1929 • It was later isolated by Florey and Chain • It was not extensively used until the 2nd World War when it was used to treat war wounds • After 2nd World War many more antibiotics were developed • Today about 150 types are used • Most are inhibitors of the protein synthesis, blocking the 70S ribosome, which is characteristic of prokaryotes Resistance • It took less than 20 years for, bacteria to show signs of resistance • Staphylococcus aureus, which causes blood poisoning and pneumonia, started to show resistance in the 1950s • Today there are different strains of S. aureus resistant to every form of antibiotic in use © 2008 Paul Billiet ODWS Multiple resistance • It seems that some resistance was already naturally present in bacterial populations • The presence of antibiotics in their environment in higher concentrations increased the pressure by natural selection • Resistant bacteria that survived, rapidly multiplied • They passed their resistant genes on to other bacteria (both disease causing pathogens and non-pathogens) © 2008 Paul Billiet ODWS Transposons & Integrons • Resistance genes are often associated with transposons, genes that easily move from one bacterium to another • Many bacteria also possess integrons, pieces of DNA that accumulate new genes • Gradually a strain of a bacterium can build up a whole range of resistance genes • This is multiple resistance • These may then be passed on in a group to other strains or other species © 2008 Paul Billiet ODWS Antibiotics promote resistance • If a patient taking a course of antibiotic treatment does not complete it • Or forgets to take the doses regularly, • Then resistant strains get a chance to build up • The antibiotics also kill innocent bystanders bacteria which are non-pathogens • This reduces the competition for the resistant pathogens • The use of antibiotics also promotes antibiotic resistance in non-pathogens too • These non-pathogens may later pass their resistance genes on to pathogens Resistance gets around • When antibiotics are used on a person, the numbers of antibiotic resistant bacteria increase in other members of the family • In places where antibiotics are used extensively e.g. hospitals and farms antibiotic resistant strains increase in numbers Antibiotic use and abuse • Viral infections are not stopped by antibiotics • Yet doctors still prescribe (or are coerced into prescribing) antibiotics to treat them Drug Action • Drugs act by specifically interfering with cellular or biochemical processes, often called 'targets‘ – The classic example of a drug target is an enzyme (inhibition) • Drugs to be effective need to exhibit a selective toxicity for the pathogen as compared to host. Many factors contributing to this selective toxicity: – – – – unique target in bacteria discrimination between host and bacteria targets greater drug accumulation by bacteria drug activation by bacteria Potential mechanisms involved in drug resistance • Conversion of the drug to an inactive form by an enzyme. • Modification of a drug sensitive site. • Increased efflux or decreased influx • Alternative pathway to bypass inhibited reaction. • Increase in the amount of an enzyme substrate (ie to compete with the drug). • Failure to activate the drug. Potential mechanisms involved in drug resistance • These modifications can arise in a population of bacteria by a number of mechanisms. – Physiological adaptations – Differential selection of resistant individuals from a mixed population of susceptible and resistant individuals. – Spontaneous mutations followed by selection. – Changes in gene expression. (gene amplification) MICROBIAL GENETICS - PLASMIDS / OTHER MOBILE GENETIC ELEMENTS PLASMIDS Characteristics, Resistance Factors, Resistance Transfer Factors Drug Resistance Mechanisms Penicillin Resistance, Penicillinase, Beta-lactamase Multiple Drug Resistance Transformation by Plasmids OTHER MOBILE GENETIC ELEMENTS Insertion Sequences Transposons Integrons Superintegrons Conjugative Transposons Genomic Islands The Busy Genome 2 3 PLASMIDS: SMALL, CIRCULAR, DOUBLE-STRAND DNA MOLECULES ~ 5 - 50 GENES, CYTOPLASMIC LOCATION, NOT ESSENTIAL (NORMALLY) REPLICATION GENES AND SITES 1 - 20 COPIES EACH / CELL SEVERAL DIFFERENT PLASMIDS / CELL RESISTANCE FACTORS - PLASMIDS WHICH CARRY GENES WHICH ENCODE PROTEINS WHICH MAKE THE BACTERIAL HOST RESISTANT TO ANTIBIOTIC - CALLED DRUG RESISTANCE RESISTANCE TRANSFER FACTORS - ALL ABOVE PLUS ABILITY TO TRANSFER PLASMID IN MATING [CONJUGATION] OTHER PLASMID GENES: HYDROCARBON CATABOLISM TOXIN PRODUCTION MINERAL UPTAKE 4 MECHANISMS OF DRUG RESISTANCE 1. MUTATION RESULTS IN ALTERED BACTERIAL PROTEIN. IT NO LONGER RECOGNIZES ANTIBIOTIC BUT CONTINUES TO PERFORM NORMAL FUNCTION IN BACTERIAL GROWTH EX: STREPTOMYCIN 2. BACTERIA ACQUIRE NEW GENE WHICH CODES FOR ENZYME WHICH DESTROYS ANTIBIOTIC EX: PENICILLINASE DESTROYS PENICILLIN 3. BACTERIA ACQUIRE NEW GENE WHICH CODES FOR ENZYME WHICH PUMPS ANTIBIOTIC BACK OUTSIDE CELL EX: TETRACYCLINE RESISTANCE PENICILLIN CLEAVAGE [INACTIVATION] BY PENICILLINASE b - LACTAM RING PENICILLINASE [b - LACTAMASE] INACTIVE 5 Mechanisms of resistance Imipenem resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosae Streptococcus pneumoniae resistance to penicillins Tetracycline MRSA penicillin binding protein PBP2A Penicillins, Cephalosporins Hawkey, P. M BMJ 1998;317:657-660 Evolution of resistance •Antibiotic use represents a strong selection pressure •If a population of bacteria with a few resistant individuals is exposed to a lethal antibiotic, the susceptible bacteria will die, but the resistant bacteria will survive •In an environment with a lot of antibiotic use, resistance alleles spread rapidly •The problem is compounded by horizontal gene transfer and by cross-resistance Horizontal transfer •Simple selection isn’t the only means for resistance alleles to spread •Bacteria can acquire resistance genes by transformation, when they pick up DNA from the environment •They can also get resistance genes by conjugation: bacterial sex, when they exchange plasmids •Plasmids can have multiple resistance genes, conferring multiresistance Cross-resistance •Resistance to one antibiotic can confer resistance to others •Resistance to cephalosporins gives resistance to methicillin, even in bacteria that have never been exposed to methicillin Managing resistance •There are two different approaches to managing antibiotic resistance: 1.Managing existing resistant pathogens 2.Avoiding future evolution of more resistance •The first can be done by, in the case of MRSA, improving hygiene in hospitals, screening hospital visitors and isolating patients •The second can be done by changing selection on bacteria Selection and resistance •Reduce inappropriate prescription of antibiotics – Increase public awareness that many diseases cannot be cured with antibiotics •Reduce use of agricultural antibiotics •Increase the number of patients who finish their courses of antibiotics •Restrict the use of new antibiotics •Where possible, use other treatments: – Vaccines – Phage treatment? Mechanisms of resistance • 1. Antibiotic modification: some bacteria have enzymes that cleave or modify antibiotics: e.g. b lactamase inactivates penicillin • 2. Denied access: membrane becomes impermeable for antibiotic: e.g. imipenem • 3. Pumping out the antibiotic faster than it gets in: e.g. tetracyclines • 4. Altered target site: antibiotic cannot bind to its intended target because the target itself has been modified • 5. production of alternative target (typically enzyme): e.g. Alternative penicillin binding protein (PBP2a) in Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics Resistance to b-lactams Resistance to glycopeptides Resistance to quinolones Resistance to macrolides and streptogramins Resistance to sulphonamides Resistance to trimethoprim Resistance to tetracyclines Resistance to chloramphenicol Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 1. Resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics - Enzymatic modification • Aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes (AMEs) : acetylating enzymes AAC, phosphorylating enzymes APH, adenylating enzymes AAD or ANT • Usually plasmid-encoded Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 1. Resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics (Cont’d) - Ribosomal resistance • Rare • Mutations in ribosomal genes • High-level streptomycin resistance in enterococci • Streptomycin resistance in M tuberculosis - Ineffective transport • Oxygen transport system Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 2. Resistance to b-lactams - Enzymatic modification - b-lactamases - Modification of penicillin binding proteins (PBPs) - “Bypass resistance” : alternative routes of peptidoglycan synthesis (PBP2’ in MRSA, PBP5 in Enterococcus faecium) - Impermeability : porin loss Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 3. Resistance to glycopeptides - GNB are naturally resistant because glycopeptides are large molecules that cannot pass through the outer membrane porins Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 3. Resistance to glycopeptides (Cont’d) - Acquired vancomycin resistance : genes encoding ligases that incorporate D-lactate in place of D-alanine as the terminal amino acid of the peptide chain reduced affinity for glycopeptide antibiotics Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 3. Resistance to glycopeptides (Cont’d) - VanA : high-level resistance to vancomycin and teicoplanin, inducible - VanB : moderate- to high-level resistance to vancomycin, susceptible to teicoplanin, constitutive VanB strains resistant to teicoplanin Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 3. Resistance to glycopeptides (Cont’d) - VanC : low-level resistance to vancomycin only, not inducible, intrinsic in Enterococcus casseliflavus, E gallinarum - VanD : resistance to vancomycin (MIC = 64 mg/l), low-level resistance to teicoplanin, not inducible, not transferable - VanE : low-level resistance to vancomycin (MIC = 16 mg/l), susceptible to teicoplanin, inducible, not transferable Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 4. Resistance to quinolones - Mutations in genes coding for DNA gyrase (gyrA, gyrB) and type IV DNA topoisomerase (parC, parE) - Altered permeability : decreased quantities of OmpF outer membrane protein - Efflux : efflux pumps (acrB, tolC, …) - qnr - Ciprofloxacin-modifying enzyme: aac(6)-Ib-cr (KRAkRTbR) Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 5. Resistance to macrolides and streptogramins - Target site alteration : modification of 23S rRNA by methylase, encoded by a class of genes erm (erythromycin ribosome methylation) - Drug modification : macrolide-modifying enzymes (esterase, phosphotransferase) - Altered transport (efflux) - Decreased permeability Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 6. Resistance to sulphonamides - Overproduction of paraaminobenzoic acid (PABA) or a change in dihydropteroic acid synthetase enzyme, mutations in chromosomal genes, plasmid-mediated - Decreased cell permeability pteridine + PABA dihydropteroic acid synthetase dihydropteroic acid Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 7. Resistance to trimethoprim - Mutation in gene coding for production of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), and/or - Increased production of DHFR - Thymine auxotrophy - Decreased cell permeability (loss of OMP) - Resistance genes integrated into transposons, on plasmid or chromosome dihydropteroic acid dihydrofolic acid dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) tetrahydrofolic acid thymidine Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 8. Resistance to tetracyclines - Energy-dependent efflux - Enzymatic modification : Bacteroides - Ribosomal protection proteins Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms 9. Resistance to chloramphenicol - Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) : acetylated chloramphenicol cannot bind to ribosome - Active efflux : Pseudomonas aeruginosa Antimicrobial Resistance Detection of resistance genes - Hybridization - Oligotyping - Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) - Nucleotide sequencing