Independent Hyderabad, India.
Front Microbiol. 2013 Mar 12;4:47. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2013.00047. eCollection 2013.
Antibiotics are chemotherapeutic agents, which have been a very powerful tool in the clinical management of bacterial diseases since the 1940s. However, benefits offered by these magic bullets have been substantially lost in subsequent days following the widespread emergence and dissemination of antibiotic-resistant strains. While it is obvious that excessive and imprudent use of antibiotics significantly contributes to the emergence of resistant strains, antibiotic resistance is also observed in natural bacteria of remote places unlikely to be impacted by human intervention. Both antibiotic biosynthetic genes and resistance-conferring genes have been known to evolve billions of years ago, long before clinical use of antibiotics. Hence it appears that antibiotics and antibiotics resistance determinants have some other roles in nature, which often elude our attention because of overemphasis on the therapeutic importance of antibiotics and the crisis imposed by the antibiotic resistance in pathogens. In the natural milieu, antibiotics are often found to be present in sub-inhibitory concentrations acting as signaling molecules supporting the process of quorum sensing and biofilm formation. They also play an important role in the production of virulence factors and influence host-parasite interactions (e.g., phagocytosis, adherence to the target cell, and so on). The evolutionary and ecological aspects of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance in the naturally occurring microbial community are little understood. Therefore, the actual role of antibiotics in nature warrants in-depth investigations. Studies on such an intriguing behavior of the microorganisms promise insight into the intricacies of the microbial physiology and are likely to provide some lead in controlling the emergence and subsequent dissemination of antibiotic resistance. This article highlights some of the recent findings on the role of antibiotics and the genes that confer resistance to antibiotics in nature.
抗生素是化学治疗剂,自 20 世纪 40 年代以来,在细菌性疾病的临床治疗中一直是非常有效的工具。然而,在抗生素耐药菌株广泛出现和传播之后,这些“神奇子弹”所带来的益处已经大大丧失。虽然很明显,抗生素的过度和轻率使用是导致耐药菌株出现的主要原因,但在不太可能受到人类干预的偏远地区的天然细菌中也观察到了抗生素耐药性。抗生素生物合成基因和赋予耐药性的基因在数十亿年前就已经进化,远远早于抗生素的临床应用。因此,抗生素和抗生素耐药性决定因素似乎在自然界中具有其他一些作用,由于我们过分强调抗生素的治疗重要性以及病原体对抗生素的耐药性所带来的危机,这些作用往往被忽视。在自然环境中,抗生素通常以亚抑菌浓度存在,作为支持群体感应和生物膜形成过程的信号分子。它们在产生毒力因子方面也起着重要作用,并影响宿主-寄生虫相互作用(例如吞噬作用、与靶细胞的附着等)。在自然存在的微生物群落中,抗生素和抗生素耐药性的进化和生态方面还知之甚少。因此,抗生素在自然界中的实际作用值得深入研究。对这些微生物这种有趣行为的研究有望深入了解微生物生理学的复杂性,并可能为控制抗生素耐药性的出现和随后的传播提供一些线索。本文重点介绍了一些关于抗生素在自然界中的作用以及赋予抗生素耐药性的基因的最新发现。