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Title: Characteristics of aztreonam as a substrate, inhibitor and inducer for beta-lactamases. Author: Sakurai Y, Yoshida Y, Saitoh K, Nemoto M, Yamaguchi A, Sawai T. Journal: J Antibiot (Tokyo); 1990 Apr; 43(4):403-10. PubMed ID: 2112533. Abstract: Aztreonam was investigated as to its characteristics as a substrate, inhibitor and inducer for the well-defined beta-lactamases of Gram-negative bacteria, and its antibacterial efficacy as to bacterial cells producing eight types of beta-lactamases was also evaluated. Aztreonam was hydrolyzed at measurable rates by class A beta-lactamases, a TEM-2 type penicillinase and the Proteus vulgaris cephalosporinase with a broad substrate range. However, the affinity of aztreonam for the class A enzymes was low, this property being well reflected by its high antibacterial activity toward producers of class A beta-lactamases. Aztreonam was extremely stable as to the typical class C cephalosporinase of Citrobacter freundii, and acted as a competitive and progressive inhibitor for the beta-lactamase. While the MICs of aztreonam in the cases of the constitutive producers of class C beta-lactamases were evidently affected by enzyme production. An experiment involving aztreonam as a inhibitor in combination with a hydrolyzable beta-lactam gave ambiguous results, however, a strong synergistic effect was found in combination with mecillinam. Using Pseudomonas aeruginosa, aztreonam was confirmed to be a poor inducer of beta-lactamases.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]