Abstract
A beta-lactam-sensitive strain (C152) of Shigella dysenteriae showed two major outer membrane proteins (OMPs) with M(r)s of 43,000 and 38,000, while the clinical isolate M2 lacked the 43,000-M(r) OMP, which acted as a channel for beta-lactam antibiotics. Permeability of beta-lactams across the outer membrane (OM) of M2 was lower than that across the OM of C152. Mutants deficient in the 43-kDa OMP could be selected in vitro from strain C152 in the presence of cefoxitin. All beta-lactam-resistant strains were sensitive to imipenem.
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CITATION STYLE
Kar, A. K., Ghosh, A. S., Chauhan, K., Ahamed, J., Basu, J., Chakrabarti, P., & Kundu, M. (1997). Involvement of a 43-kilodalton outer membrane protein in β-lactam resistance of Shigella dysenteriae. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 41(10), 2302–2304. https://doi.org/10.1128/aac.41.10.2302
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