“…This latter property appears to be peculiar to these antibiotics, since carbapenems have been shown to penetrate rapidly through the outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa via a specific porin pathway (32), and in Escherichia coli, too, in which a specific pathway is apparently absent (7), the permeability coefficients of meropenem and imipenem are 5 and 14 times higher, respectively, than that of cephaloridine, one of the noncarbapenem -lactams endowed with the highest penetration rates (7). Less information is available on the mechanism by which carbapenems penetrate in other species of the family Enterobacteriaceae, although a considerable amount of evidence suggests that in many species the lack of certain outer membrane proteins is associated with the acquisition of resistance to these antibiotics (5,10,12,16,20,24,25,33). A study of carbapenem influx under conditions which, as far as possible, preserve the physiological status of the cells seems to be of great importance for comparing carbapenem permeation in different species and for assessing the respective weights of permeability and other periplasmic factors, such as -lactamase activity, in determining susceptibility or resistance to these antibiotics.…”