The Structure of Resistance

Frédéric Dardel and colleagues crystallized both the narrow and broad-spectrum resistance forms of the antibiotic-modifying acetyltransferase enzyme. Their report reveals that the enzyme has a flexible active site that can evolve to accommodate new antibiotics, allowing the bacteria to break them down and render them useless. This explains why this type of enzyme is now carried by many bacteria struggling for survival in the antibiotic age.

More importantly, the research provides new insight for the design of new antibiotics that could evade this form of resistance, and new inhibitors that would extend the effectiveness of current antibiotics, both of which could help in the fight against the deadly infections becoming more frequent in hospitals.

Enzyme structural plasticity and the emergence of broad-spectrum antibiotic resistance

Frédérique Maurice, Isabelle Broutin, Isabelle Podglajen, Philippe Benas, Ekkehard Collatz & Frédéric Dardel

http://www.nature.com/embor/journal/vaop/ncurrent/abs/embor20089.html

Author Contact
Frédéric Dardel Tel: +33 1 53 73 95 12; Fax: +33 1 53 73 99 25; E-mail: frederic.dardel@univ-paris5.fr
Editor contact
Dr. Nonia Pariente Tel: +4962218891305; Fax: +4962218891230; E-mail: pariente@embo.org

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Nonia Pariente alfa

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