scholarly journals Antimicrobial Peptide Resistance Mechanisms of Human Bacterial Pathogens

Antibiotics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 461-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn Nawrocki ◽  
Emily Crispell ◽  
Shonna McBride

Author(s):  
Adyasa Barik ◽  
Pandiyan Rajesh ◽  
Manthiram Malathi ◽  
Vellaisamy Balasubramanian

: In recent years, over use of antibiotics has been raising its head to a serious problem all around the world as pathogens become drug resistant and create challenges to the medical field. This failure of most potent antibiotics that kill pathogens increases the thirst for research to look further way of killing pathogens. It has been led to the findings of antimicrobial peptide which is the most potent peptide to destroy pathogens. This review gives special emphasis to the usage of marine bacteria and other microorganisms for antimicrobial peptide (AMP) which are eco friendly as well as a developing class of natural and synthetic peptides with a wide spectrum of targets to pathogenic microbes. Consequently, a significant attention has been paid mainly to (i) the structure and types of anti microbial peptides and (ii) mode of action and mechanism of antimicrobial peptide resistance to pathogens. In addition to this, the designing of AMPs has been analysed thoroughly for reducing toxicity and developing better potent AMP. It has been done by the modified unnatural amino acids by amidation to target the control of biofilm and persister cell.


Author(s):  
Cláudia A. Ribeiro ◽  
Luke A. Rahman ◽  
Louis G. Holmes ◽  
Ayrianna M. Woody ◽  
Calum M. Webster ◽  
...  

AbstractThe spread of multidrug-resistance in Gram-negative bacterial pathogens presents a major clinical challenge, and new approaches are required to combat these organisms. Nitric oxide (NO) is a well-known antimicrobial that is produced by the immune system in response to infection, and numerous studies have demonstrated that NO is a respiratory inhibitor with both bacteriostatic and bactericidal properties. However, given that loss of aerobic respiratory complexes is known to diminish antibiotic efficacy, it was hypothesised that the potent respiratory inhibitor NO would elicit similar effects. Indeed, the current work demonstrates that pre-exposure to NO-releasers elicits a > tenfold increase in IC50 for gentamicin against pathogenic E. coli (i.e. a huge decrease in lethality). It was therefore hypothesised that hyper-sensitivity to NO may have arisen in bacterial pathogens and that this trait could promote the acquisition of antibiotic-resistance mechanisms through enabling cells to persist in the presence of toxic levels of antibiotic. To test this hypothesis, genomics and microbiological approaches were used to screen a collection of E. coli clinical isolates for antibiotic susceptibility and NO tolerance, although the data did not support a correlation between increased carriage of antibiotic resistance genes and NO tolerance. However, the current work has important implications for how antibiotic susceptibility might be measured in future (i.e. ± NO) and underlines the evolutionary advantage for bacterial pathogens to maintain tolerance to toxic levels of NO.


2012 ◽  
Vol 85 (5) ◽  
pp. 962-974 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamad A. Hamad ◽  
Flaviana Di Lorenzo ◽  
Antonio Molinaro ◽  
Miguel A. Valvano

2013 ◽  
Vol 350 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margot Schlusselhuber ◽  
Kristen Guldbech ◽  
Corinne Sevin ◽  
Matthias Leippe ◽  
Sandrine Petry ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (47) ◽  
pp. 8781-8795 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaisong Yuan ◽  
Qingsong Mei ◽  
Xinjie Guo ◽  
Youwei Xu ◽  
Danting Yang ◽  
...  

A SERS based biosensor has been developed for isolation, detection and killing of multiple bacterial pathogens.


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