Study shows hospital bacteria's ability to change
From: Flinders University
May
25, 2022 -- Treatment of severe infections caused by pathogenic bacteria relies
on 'last resort' antibiotics, but rising resistance by 'superbugs' to most
clinically approved drugs leaves patients exposed to possible fatalities.
Researchers are focusing on how bacterial cells adapt and resist antimicrobial
medications -- with a new article focusing on a hospital strain of
Acinetobacter baumannii and its cellular response to important antibiotic
colistin.
The World Health
Organization names antibiotic resistance as one of the biggest threats to
global health, food security, and development with a growing number of
infections -- including pneumonia, tuberculosis, gonorrhoea and salmonellosis
-- becoming harder to treat as antibiotics used to treat them become less
effective.
Antibiotic resistance
leads to longer hospital stays, higher medical costs and increased mortality,
researchers warn.
"Around the world,
there are fewer and fewer new antibiotics being identified and produced for
medical use -- and this is compounded by the ever-increasing antibiotic
resistance seen in bacterial strains causing infections," says Flinders
microbial researcher Dr Sarah Giles.
"If we can
understand the bacterial mechanisms, such as this, we can potentially apply new
therapies to treat patients -- particularly those with multi-drug-resistant
bacterial infections."
As part of a
NHMRC-Flinders University Research Scholarship study, Dr Giles and other
authors noted that the A. baumannii bacterial strain had a
two-part signal system which altered its potential response to antibiotic
treatment.
This 'two-component
signal transduction' observed involves a response regulator protein in the
StkR/S system acting as a repressor and when genetically removed hundreds of
transcriptional changes are seen.
Some of these changes
affect the bacterial cell's outer membrane composition leading to colistin
resistance.
"Colistin is known
as a 'last resort' antibiotic and therefore identifying and understanding the
mechanisms contributing to bacterial antibiotic-resistant is critical,"
says senior researcher Professor Melissa Brown.
Antimicrobial
resistance (AMR) occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites change over
time and no longer respond to medicines, making infections harder to treat and
increasing the risk of disease spread, severe illness and even death.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220525103001.htm
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