Antibiotic-Induced Bacterial Cell Death: A "Radical" Way of Dying?

抗生素诱导的细菌细胞死亡:一种“激进的”死亡方式?

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Abstract

The rising prevalence of antibiotic resistance is rendering certain antibiotics ineffective in treating bacterial infections of public health importance. Deepening our understanding of how these drugs induce bacterial cell death, and whether antibiotics trigger a cell death program compared to direct killing, could help generate novel antibiotics or modify existing therapeutic approaches to improve clinical outcomes. Among the most widely used bactericidal antibiotics (beta-lactams, aminoglycosides, and fluoroquinolones), the primary drug-target interactions, and how they induce cell death, are well characterized. Additionally, there has been a recent debate as to whether a generalized bacterial cell death mechanism exists, shared among bactericidal antibiotics. The hypothesized mechanism, referred to as the common reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathway in this chapter, argues that certain bactericidal antibiotics have off-target effects that increase ROS generation in an iron- and oxygen-dependent manner. Moreover, this spike in ROS is thought to also contribute to induced bacterial cell death. Here we will discuss the target-specific mechanisms of distinct classes of bactericidal antibiotics, how these promote bacterial cell death, and the data that both support and refute the existence of a common cell death pathway.

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