Nazeer Rahan Rudland, Askenasy Isabel, Swain Jemima E V, Welch Martin
Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
NPJ Antimicrob Resist. 2024;2(1):45. doi: 10.1038/s44259-024-00063-2. Epub 2024 Dec 4.
The acquisition of antibiotic resistance in bacteria, though a deeply concerning international issue, is reasonably well-understood at a mechanistic level. Less well-understood is why bacteria that are sensitive in vitro to well-established and widely-used antibiotics sometimes fail to respond to these agents in vivo. This is a particularly common problem in chronic, polymicrobial infection scenarios. Here, we discuss this in vitro-in vivo disconnect from the perspective of the bacterium, focusing in particular on how infection micro/macro-environment, biogeography, and the presence of co-habiting species affect the response to antibiotics. Using selected exemplars, we also consider interventions that might improve treatment outcomes, as well as ecologically 'eubiotic' approaches that have less of an impact on the patient's commensal microflora. In our view, the accrued data strongly suggest that we need a more comprehensive understanding of the in situ microbiology at infection sites.
细菌获得抗生素耐药性虽是一个令人深感担忧的国际问题,但在机制层面已得到较好理解。然而,对于那些在体外对成熟且广泛使用的抗生素敏感的细菌,为何有时在体内却无法对这些药物产生反应,人们了解得较少。在慢性、多微生物感染的情况下,这是一个尤为常见的问题。在此,我们从细菌的角度探讨这种体外 - 体内差异,特别关注感染的微观/宏观环境、生物地理学以及共存物种的存在如何影响对抗生素的反应。通过选定的示例,我们还考虑了可能改善治疗结果的干预措施,以及对患者共生微生物群影响较小的生态“益生素”方法。我们认为,累积的数据有力地表明,我们需要更全面地了解感染部位的原位微生物学。