Hooper David C, Jacoby George A
Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114.
Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, Massachusetts 01805.
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med. 2016 Sep 1;6(9):a025320. doi: 10.1101/cshperspect.a025320.
Quinolone antimicrobials are widely used in clinical medicine and are the only current class of agents that directly inhibit bacterial DNA synthesis. Quinolones dually target DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV binding to specific domains and conformations so as to block DNA strand passage catalysis and stabilize DNA-enzyme complexes that block the DNA replication apparatus and generate double breaks in DNA that underlie their bactericidal activity. Resistance has emerged with clinical use of these agents and is common in some bacterial pathogens. Mechanisms of resistance include mutational alterations in drug target affinity and efflux pump expression and acquisition of resistance-conferring genes. Resistance mutations in one or both of the two drug target enzymes are commonly in a localized domain of the GyrA and ParC subunits of gyrase and topoisomerase IV, respectively, and reduce drug binding to the enzyme-DNA complex. Other resistance mutations occur in regulatory genes that control the expression of native efflux pumps localized in the bacterial membrane(s). These pumps have broad substrate profiles that include other antimicrobials as well as quinolones. Mutations of both types can accumulate with selection pressure and produce highly resistant strains. Resistance genes acquired on plasmids confer low-level resistance that promotes the selection of mutational high-level resistance. Plasmid-encoded resistance is because of Qnr proteins that protect the target enzymes from quinolone action, a mutant aminoglycoside-modifying enzyme that also modifies certain quinolones, and mobile efflux pumps. Plasmids with these mechanisms often encode additional antimicrobial resistances and can transfer multidrug resistance that includes quinolones.
喹诺酮类抗菌药物在临床医学中广泛应用,是目前唯一能直接抑制细菌DNA合成的一类药物。喹诺酮类药物双重靶向DNA旋转酶和拓扑异构酶IV,与特定结构域和构象结合,从而阻断DNA链通过催化作用,并稳定DNA - 酶复合物,该复合物会阻断DNA复制装置并在DNA中产生双链断裂,这是其杀菌活性的基础。随着这些药物在临床中的使用,耐药性已经出现,并且在一些细菌病原体中很常见。耐药机制包括药物靶点亲和力的突变改变、外排泵表达以及获得耐药性赋予基因。两种药物靶点酶中一种或两种的耐药性突变通常分别发生在DNA旋转酶的GyrA亚基和拓扑异构酶IV的ParC亚基的局部结构域中,会降低药物与酶 - DNA复合物的结合。其他耐药性突变发生在控制位于细菌膜上的天然外排泵表达的调控基因中。这些泵具有广泛的底物谱,包括其他抗菌药物以及喹诺酮类药物。两种类型的突变都可以在选择压力下积累并产生高度耐药菌株。在质粒上获得的耐药基因赋予低水平耐药性,从而促进了突变型高水平耐药性的选择。质粒编码的耐药性是由于Qnr蛋白保护靶点酶免受喹诺酮作用、一种也能修饰某些喹诺酮的突变型氨基糖苷修饰酶以及移动外排泵。具有这些机制的质粒通常还编码其他抗菌耐药性,并且可以传递包括喹诺酮类药物在内的多重耐药性。