Fiona Walsh, Agroscope Changins Wädenswil, Wädenswil, Switzerland, has written an interesting overview of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance for Frontiers Microbiology.
  
Posted by Tim Sandle
There have been many calls for more information about 
the natural resistome and these have also highlighted the importance of 
understanding the environmental resistome in the preservation of 
antibiotics for the treatment of infections. However, to date there have
 been few studies which have investigated the roles of antibiotics and 
resistances outside of the clinical environment. This lack of data also 
highlights the difficulties faced by microbiologists in designing these 
experiments to produce meaningful data. Antibiotics and antibiotic 
resistance have most commonly been viewed in the context of human use 
and effects. However, both have co-existed in nature for millennia. 
Recently the roles of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes have 
started to be discussed in terms of functions other than bacterial 
inhibition and protection. This special topic has focused on both the 
traditional role of antibiotics as warfare mechanisms and their 
alternative roles and uses within nature.
The research topic starts with an introduction into 
antimicrobial resistance in medicine, its linkage to the global 
environmental microbiota and the many different roles of antibiotics and
 antibiotic resistance in nature, providing the background to the topic (Cantas et al., 2013).
 The following chapter discusses the idea that the understanding of 
antibiotic resistance implies expanding our knowledge on multi-level 
population biology of bacteria (Baquero et al., 2013).
 This brings with it inherent problems of designing experimental 
procedures and standards that can be used in many different microbiomes 
from human to soil and is discussed further by Walsh (Walsh, 2013).
 A number of models are proposed to study and understand the biological 
impact of selection and diversification of antibiotic resistance 
mechanisms, in particular using the β-lactamases as models (Galán et al., 2013; Patel and Bonomo, 2013; Popowska and Krawczyk-Balska, 2013).
 The β-lactamases constitute the most widespread mechanism of 
resistance, at least among pathogenic bacteria, with more than 1000 
enzymes identified in the literature. We present some examples of the 
alternative functions for the multi-drug resistance mechanisms of 
efflux, that range from bacterial interactions with plant or animal 
hosts, to the detoxification of metabolic intermediates or the 
maintenance of cellular homeostasis and also the potential role of 
extracellular DNA in antibiotic resistance and virulence (Alvarez-Ortega et al., 2013).
 Bacterial responses to antibiotics may be concentration dependent and 
so we discuss the different types of interactions mediated by 
antibiotics and non-antibiotic metabolites as a function of their 
concentrations and speculate on how these may amplify the overall 
antibiotic resistance/tolerance and the spread of antibiotic resistance 
determinants in a context of poly-microbial community (Bernier and Surette, 2013; Lewenza, 2013; Sengupta et al., 2013).
 The use of antibiotics may also be regarded as pollution. Thus, the 
widespread use and abuse of antibiotic therapy has evolutionary and 
ecological consequences, some of which are only just beginning to be 
examined (Gillings, 2013).
These papers thoroughly review the many different aspects
 of antibiotic resistance and the roles of antibiotics in nature and 
link these to the emerging antibiotic resistances of particular 
importance to the treatment of infectious diseases.
References
Posted by Tim Sandle
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