Affiliation:
1. PathoGenesis Corporation, Seattle, Washington 98119
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
can employ many distinct mechanisms of resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics; however, in cystic fibrosis patients, more than 90% of aminoglycoside-resistant
P. aeruginosa
isolates are of the impermeability phenotype. The precise molecular mechanisms that produce aminoglycoside impermeability-type resistance are yet to be elucidated. A subtractive hybridization technique was used to reveal gene expression differences between PAO1 and isogenic, spontaneous aminoglycoside-resistant mutants of the impermeability phenotype. Among the many genes found to be up-regulated in these laboratory mutants were the
amrAB
genes encoding a recently discovered efflux system. The
amrAB
genes appear to be the same as the recently described
mexXY
genes; however, the resistance profile that we see in
P. aeruginosa
is very different from that described for
Escherichia coli
with
mexXY
. Direct evidence for AmrAB involvement in aminoglycoside resistance was provided by the deletion of
amrB
in the PAO1-derived laboratory mutant, which resulted in the restoration of aminoglycoside sensitivity to a level nearly identical to that of the parent strain. Furthermore, transcription of the
amrAB
genes was shown to be up-regulated in
P. aeruginosa
clinical isolates displaying the impermeability phenotype compared to a genotypically matched sensitive clinical isolate from the same patient. This suggests the possibility that AmrAB-mediated efflux is a clinically relevant mechanism of aminoglycoside resistance. Although it is unlikely that hyperexpression of AmrAB is the sole mechanism conferring the impermeability phenotype, we believe that the Amr efflux system can contribute to a complex interaction of molecular events resulting in the aminoglycoside impermeability-type resistance phenotype.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
203 articles.
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