Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases and Medical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114-2696
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Gemifloxacin, a novel quinolone with potent activity against
Staphylococcus aureus
, was 8- to 16-fold more active against wild-type
S. aureus
than ciprofloxacin. The two- to fourfold increase in the MIC of gemifloxacin in genetically defined
grlBA
mutants and the twofold increase in a single
gyrA
mutant, supported by the low frequency of selection of resistant mutants at twice the MIC (7.4 × 10
−11
to 1.1 × 10
−10
), suggested similar targeting of the two enzymes by gemifloxacin. Dual mutations in both gyrase and topoisomerase IV caused a 64- to 128-fold increase in the MIC of gemifloxacin, similar to that seen with ciprofloxacin. Gemifloxacin also had similar activity in vitro against topoisomerase IV and gyrase purified from
S. aureus
(50% inhibitory concentrations of 0.25 and 0.31 μg/ml, respectively). This activity was 10- to 20-fold higher than that of ciprofloxacin for topoisomerase IV and 33-fold higher than that for gyrase. In contrast to the in vitro findings, only topoisomerase IV mutants were selected in first-step mutants. Overexpression of the NorA efflux pump had a minimal effect on resistance to gemifloxacin, and a mutation in the promoter region of the gene for NorA was selected only in the sixth step of serial selection of mutants. Our data show that although gemifloxacin targets purified topoisomerase IV and gyrase similarly in vitro, topoisomerase IV is the preferred target in the bacteria. Selection of novel resistance mutations in
grlA
requires further expansion of quinolone-resistance-determining regions, and their study may provide increased insight into enzyme-quinolone interactions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
28 articles.
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