The intrinsic and acquired resistance of Mycobacterium abscessus to commonly used antibiotics limits the chemotherapeutic options for infections caused by these mycobacteria. Intrinsic resistance is attributed to a combination of the permeability barrier of the complex multilayer cell envelope, drug export systems, antibiotic targets with low affinity and enzymes that neutralize antibiotics in the cytoplasm. To date, acquired resistance has only been observed for aminoglycosides and macrolides, which is conferred by mutations affecting the genes encoding the antibiotic targets (rrs and rrl, respectively). Here we summarize previous and recent findings on the resistance of M. abscessus to antibiotics in light of what has been discovered for other mycobacteria. Since we can now distinguish three groups of strains belonging to M. abscessus (M. abscessus sensu stricto, Mycobacterium massiliense and Mycobacterium bolletii), studies on antibiotic susceptibility and resistance should be considered according to this new classification. This review raises the profile of this important pathogen and highlights the work needed to decipher the molecular events responsible for its extensive chemotherapeutic resistance.
Mycobacterium abscessus is considered to be the most virulent of the rapidly growing mycobacteria. Generation of bacterial gene knockout mutants has been a useful tool for studying factors that contribute to virulence of pathogenic bacteria. Until recently, the optimal genetic approach to generation of M. abscessus gene knockout mutants was not clear. Based on the recent identification of genetic recombineering as the preferred approach, a M. abscessus mutant was generated in which the gene mmpL4b, critical to glycopeptidolipid synthesis, was deleted. Compared to the previously well-characterized parental strain 390S, the mmpL4B deletion mutant had lost sliding motility and the ability to form biofilm, but acquired the ability to replicate in human macrophages and stimulate macrophage Toll-like receptor 2. This study demonstrates that deletion of a gene associated with expression of a cell-wall lipid can result in acquisition of an immunostimulatory, invasive bacterial phenotype and has important implications for the study of M. abscessus pathogenesis at the cellular level.
Mutations in the rrs gene that confer high-level 2-deoxystreptamine aminoglycoside resistance on M. abscessus differ in their dominance/recessivity traits and have no biological cost under our experimental conditions.
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