Fluoroquinolone resistance: mechanisms, impact on bacteria, and role in evolutionary success
- PMID: 24842194
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tim.2014.04.007
Fluoroquinolone resistance: mechanisms, impact on bacteria, and role in evolutionary success
Abstract
Quinolone and fluoroquinolone antibiotics are potent, broad-spectrum agents commonly used to treat a range of infections. Resistance to these agents is multifactorial and can be via one or a combination of target-site gene mutations, increased production of multidrug-resistance (MDR) efflux pumps, modifying enzymes, and/or target-protection proteins. Fluoroquinolone-resistant clinical isolates of bacteria have emerged readily and recent data have shown that resistance to this class of antibiotics can have diverse, species-dependent impacts on host-strain fitness. Here we outline the impacts of quinolone-resistance mutations in relation to the fitness and evolutionary success of mutant strains.
Keywords: chromosome structure; fitness.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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