Artículos de revistas
Evolution of Metallo-β-lactamases: Trends Revealed by Natural Diversity and in vitro Evolution
Fecha
2014-07Registro en:
Meini, María Rocío; Llarrull, Leticia Irene; Vila, Alejandro Jose; Evolution of Metallo-β-lactamases: Trends Revealed by Natural Diversity and in vitro Evolution; MDPI; Antibiotics; 3; 3; 7-2014; 285-316
2079-6382
Autor
Meini, María Rocío
Llarrull, Leticia Irene
Vila, Alejandro Jose
Resumen
The production of β-lactamase enzymes is one of the most distributed resistance mechanisms towards β-lactam antibiotics. Metallo-β-lactamases constitute a worrisome group of these kinds of enzymes, since they present a broad spectrum profile, being able to hydrolyze not only penicillins, but also the latest generation of cephalosporins and carbapenems, which constitute at present the last resource antibiotics. The VIM, IMP, and NDM enzymes comprise the main groups of clinically relevant metallo-β-lactamases. Here we present an update of the features of the natural variants that have emerged and of the ones that have been engineered in the laboratory, in an effort to find sequence and structural determinants of substrate preferences. This knowledge is of upmost importance in novel drug design efforts. We also discuss the advances in knowledge achieved by means of in vitro directed evolution experiments, and the potential of this approach to predict natural evolution of metallo-β-lactamases.