Accumulation in gram-postive and gram-negative bacteria as a mechanism of resistance to erythromycin.

J C Mao, M Putterman
Author Information

Abstract

Erythromycin was recovered in high yield after incubation with gram-negative bacteria. The cell-free protein-synthesizing preparation from gram-negative bacteria is equally as susceptible to the antibiotic as is that from gram-positive bacteria. Thus, neither destruction of erythromycin nor the absence of the step susceptible to the antibiotic plays an important role in the resistance mechanism of gram-negative bacteria. A 100-fold difference in accumulation of erythromycin between gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria was observed. This alone explains the resistance of gram-negative bacteria to erythromycin. Furthermore, data showed that the inhibition of growth is closely related to the accumulation of erythromycin. The concentration of intracellular erythromycin in gram-positive bacteria was found to be 44- to 90-fold greater than that of the extracellular medium. However, the antibiotic did not accumulate on the cell walls, nor was the accumulation energy-dependent. It is proposed that it takes place by the binding of erythromycin to the bacterial ribosomes, forming a very stable complex. The dissociation constants of erythromycin-Staphylococcus aureus complex and erythromycin-Bacillus subtilis complex were determined to be 1.1 x 10(-7) and 3.4 x 11(-7)m, respectively.

References

  1. Biochem Pharmacol. 1965 Jul;14(7):1049-58 [PMID: 5854735]
  2. Biochim Biophys Acta. 1966 Jan 18;114(1):204-6 [PMID: 5327844]
  3. J Biochem. 1966 Jun;59(6):632-4 [PMID: 5336207]
  4. Biochim Biophys Acta. 1966 Aug 17;123(2):438-40 [PMID: 4961167]
  5. J Bacteriol. 1967 Jul;94(1):80-6 [PMID: 6028003]
  6. Biochem Pharmacol. 1967 Dec;16(12):2441-3 [PMID: 6075404]
  7. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med. 1952 Oct;81(1):175-83 [PMID: 13047351]
  8. J Bacteriol. 1962 Jun;83:1193-201 [PMID: 14450179]
  9. Nature. 1962 Oct 13;196:195-6 [PMID: 13993473]
  10. Science. 1964 Mar 27;143(3613):1445-6 [PMID: 14107448]
  11. J Bacteriol. 1964 Sep;88:630-2 [PMID: 14208499]
  12. Antimicrob Agents Chemother (Bethesda). 1963;161:395-401 [PMID: 14274930]
  13. Br Med Bull. 1960 Jan;16:16-22 [PMID: 14433883]

MeSH Term

Azides
Bacillus subtilis
Carbon Isotopes
Cell Wall
Cyanides
Dinitrophenols
Drug Resistance, Microbial
Erythromycin
Escherichia coli
Hot Temperature
Peptide Biosynthesis
Proteus
Ribosomes
Staphylococcus

Chemicals

Azides
Carbon Isotopes
Cyanides
Dinitrophenols
Erythromycin

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0bacteriaerythromycingram-negativeantibioticgram-positiveresistanceaccumulationcomplexsusceptiblemechanism1x-7Erythromycinrecoveredhighyieldincubationcell-freeprotein-synthesizingpreparationequallyThusneitherdestructionabsencestepplaysimportantrole100-folddifferenceobservedaloneexplainsFurthermoredatashowedinhibitiongrowthcloselyrelatedconcentrationintracellularfound44-90-foldgreaterextracellularmediumHoweveraccumulatecellwallsenergy-dependentproposedtakesplacebindingbacterialribosomesformingstabledissociationconstantserythromycin-Staphylococcusaureuserythromycin-Bacillussubtilisdetermined103411mrespectivelyAccumulationgram-postive

Similar Articles

Cited By