Antibiotic Resistance: Evolution in Real Time
Bacteria evolve so rapidly that resistance to a new antibiotic can emerge within months of clinical introduction. The WHO estimates antimicrobial resistance (AMR) contributed to 1.27 million deaths in 2019 — and without action, could kill 10 million per year by 2050. Understanding the biology and mathematics of resistance is the first step to combating it.
1. How Antibiotics Work
Antibiotics target structures or processes essential to bacteria but absent or different in human cells — explaining selective toxicity:
- Cell wall synthesis inhibitors: β-lactams (penicillin, amoxicillin, carbapenems), glycopeptides (vancomycin). Inhibit transpeptidases that cross-link peptidoglycan → wall weakens → osmotic lysis. Human cells have no cell wall.
- Protein synthesis inhibitors: Aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, macrolides. Target bacterial 70S ribosome (30S or 50S subunit). Human ribosomes are 80S → usually selective (mitochondrial 70S ribosomes → side effects).
- DNA replication inhibitors: Fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin) inhibit bacterial gyrase (topoisomerase II). Sulfonamides block folate synthesis.
- Cell membrane disruptors: Polymyxins (colistin) — last resort. Bind lipopolysaccharide in gram-negative outer membrane → disrupts permeability.
2. Resistance Mechanisms
3. Mutation Rates and Selection
4. Horizontal Gene Transfer
Unlike vertical (parent-to-offspring) inheritance, horizontal gene transfer (HGT) allows resistance genes to spread between species — potentially crossing genus boundaries in hours:
- Conjugation: Bacteria form physical contact via sex pili; plasmid DNA transfers through a channel. R-plasmids (resistance plasmids) can carry 5-10 different resistance genes simultaneously. One conjugation event spreads a multi-drug-resistant package.
- Transformation: Bacteria take up naked DNA from the environment (e.g., from lysed bacteria). Streptococcus pneumoniae is naturally competent. Penicillin resistance in pneumococcus arose from genetic material of commensal streptococci.
- Transduction: Bacteriophages accidentally package host DNA and inject it into the next host. Phage-mediated transfer of toxin genes → new virulent pathogen (MRSA virulence factors).
- Transposons and integrons: "Jumping genes" that move between plasmids and chromosomes, capturing and rearranging resistance cassettes. Class 1 integrons are found in virtually all resistant Gram-negative bacteria.
5. ESKAPE Pathogens and Clinical Reality
The ESKAPE pathogens — named by the IDSA as those most likely to "escape" antibiotic treatment — represent the most urgent AMR threats:
- E — Enterococcus faecium: VRE (vancomycin-resistant). Common in hospital ICUs, especially immunocompromised patients. Intrinsic resistance to many antibiotics.
- S — Staphylococcus aureus: MRSA, resistant to all β-lactams. Community-MRSA now epidemic. HA-MRSA deaths exceed 10,000/year in the US.
- K — Klebsiella pneumoniae: Carbapenem-resistant (CR-Kpn). Mortality 40-50% for bacteraemia. NDM, KPC, OXA-48 carbapenemases.
- A — Acinetobacter baumannii: Extensive drug-resistant (XDR) strains. Survives on hospital surfaces for weeks. Colistin often last resort.
- P — Pseudomonas aeruginosa: Multidrug-resistant (MDR) with intrinsic efflux pumps. Dangerous in cystic fibrosis and burn patients.
- E — Enterobacteriaceae: ESBL-producing E. coli. Most common AMR pathogen. UTIs with no oral treatment options.
6. Antibiotic Discovery Pipeline
The antibiotic discovery pipeline is critically depleted. Most antibiotics approved since 2000 are derivatives of existing classes — resistance to which exists or develops quickly:
7. Strategies to Combat AMR
- Antibiotic stewardship: Use the right antibiotic at the right dose for the right duration. Rapid diagnostics (PCR, MALDI-TOF) to identify pathogen and resistance profile in hours (not days). Each course that's unnecessary is avoided — selection pressure reduced.
- Phage therapy: Bacteriophages are viruses that kill bacteria with high specificity. Personalised phage therapy against MDR infections has shown dramatic individual successes (Strathdee UCSD cases). Challenges: phage resistance can also evolve, immune clearance, regulatory pathway unclear.
- Antivirulence strategies: Rather than killing bacteria — block their virulence factors (quorum sensing inhibitors, toxin inhibitors). Less selective pressure for resistance since bacteria can survive but can't harm the host.
- Combination therapy: Two drugs with different targets — probability of simultaneous resistance mutations is product of individual probabilities (~10⁻⁸ × 10⁻⁸ = 10⁻¹⁶). Basis of tuberculosis 4-drug RIPE regimen.
- Push/pull incentives: Government contracts (US BARDA, UK AMR fund) that pay for development regardless of sales volume. "Market entry rewards" for successful new antibiotics. WHO "priority pathogens" list to direct funding.
- Vaccines: Pneumococcal, Hib, meningococcal vaccines reduce bacterial infections → fewer antibiotics prescribed. S. aureus vaccine remains an elusive goal (multiple clinical trial failures).