Production of antimicrobial substances, by hospital bacteria, active against other micro-organisms.

J Hosp Infect

Laboratory of Microbiological Research, Institute of Biotechnology, University of Talca, Chile.

Published: September 2001

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study of 59 clinical bacterial strains from patients at the Regional Hospital of Talca found that 74% produced antibacterial substances, significantly higher than the 18% from non-hospital strains.
  • Most of the hospital strains showed resistance to various antimicrobial agents, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa being the most common antibacterial producer, exhibiting high potency and a broad spectrum of activity.
  • The research indicated that the ability to produce these antibacterial substances and the resistance traits are linked to extrachromosomal DNA, suggesting that understanding these properties could help manage bacterial strains in hospital settings.

Article Abstract

Fifty-nine clinical strains of bacteria, isolated from patients in the Regional Hospital of Talca, were studied. Seventy-four percent of these strains produced antibacterial substances, in comparison with 18% of the same bacterial species obtained from patients from a non-hospital habitat. Almost all the bacteria isolated from hospitalized patients demonstrated in vitro resistance to different antimicrobial agents. Pseudomonas aeruginosa was the most frequent species producing antibacterial substances and its products were of high potency, with a wide spectrum of antimicrobial activity. Cure of plasmid DNA, in most of the antibacterial-producer strains, resulted in the loss of their lethal activity and they also became susceptible in vitro to anti-microbials. These results indicated that such properties are encoded in extrachromosomal DNA. We believe that the knowledge of the antimicrobial activity and resistance to antimicrobials of bacteria from a hospital habitat can help explain the selection and persistence of such strains in this particular ecological niche.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/jhin.2001.1047DOI Listing

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