Abstract

Antibiotic resistance is a major global concern and challenge in the 21st century. Enterobacteriaceae are one of the important pathogens of hospital-acquired infections. With the increasing use of antibiotics in clinical practice, a variety of drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, especially multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae have emerged, posing an increasingly serious threat to human health. Bacteria can acquire antibiotic resistance by mutation or horizontal transfer of antibiotic resistance genes, and it is often possible to predict the corresponding resistance phenotype from known mechanism. However, recent findings suggest that genetic background and environmental factors could alter the expression of specific resistance genes and that a given genotype does not always generate the expected resistance phenotype. The genotype-phenotype segregation greatly hampers our ability to predict antibiotic resistance phenotype from a genetic perspective. In this review, we explore the genetic and environmental regulation of the expression of antibiotic resistance genes in a variety of Enterobacteriaceae, with the aim to provide scientific evidence for genetic prediction of antibiotic resistance phenotype and clinical guidance on drug use.

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