Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Antibiotics of the future are prone to bacterial resistance

01.30.25 | HUN-REN Szegedi Biológiai Kutatóközpont

Apple iPhone 17 Pro

Apple iPhone 17 Pro delivers top performance and advanced cameras for field documentation, data collection, and secure research communications.


Researchers from the HUN-REN Biological Research Centre, Szeged (Hungary), have made a concerning discovery about the future of antibiotics. Two recent studies, published just days apart in Nature Microbiology and Science Translational Medicine found that resistance can develop against new antibiotics even before they are widely used, compromising their effectiveness from the start. The studies focused on five critical bacterial species that cause major hospital infections and examined 18 new antibiotics, some already on the market and others still in development.

No Antibiotics Are Free from Resistance.

" New antibiotics are often marketed as resistance-free, but this claim relies on limited data ", says Csaba Pál, PhD, principal investigator. " Our research highlights a major issue: antibiotic development tends to prioritize broad-spectrum activity - that is the number of bacterial species a drug targets- over long-term sustainability. While many new antibiotics indeed offer a broader spectrum, this doesn’t guarantee they will remain effective in the long run in clinical use ."

The studies found that resistance developed rapidly against nearly all the tested antibiotics, defying earlier expectations. For example, teixobactin, once hailed as a revolutionary drug, was believed to be less prone to resistance. However, the research revealed that bacteria can adapt to it with this adaptation resulting in cross-resistance to other critical antibiotics. Alarmingly, the team also found that resistance mutations may already exist in bacterial populations, likely due to the overuse of older antibiotics and the shared resistance mechanisms between those and new drugs. These pre-existing mutations could render even the newest drugs ineffective shortly after they are introduced into clinical use.

Rethinking Antibiotic Development.

The studies call for a fundamental shift in how antibiotics are developed. Drug companies must incorporate resistance studies early in the development process to anticipate and mitigate risks before antibiotics are released. Integrating resistance prediction and genetic surveillance into drug design could reduce the chances of failure.

Lejla Daruka, PhD, one of the lead authors, notes, " Some new antibiotics show more promise than others, as resistance develops more slowly or only in specific bacterial species. Understanding why these drugs perform better is the next crucial step ."

The studies emphasize the importance of prioritizing antibiotics with novel modes of action to bypass existing resistance. In cases where only certain bacterial species are prone to resistance, narrow-spectrum therapy could provide an effective alternative. Finally, the studies stress the urgency of responsible antibiotic use to slow down the evolution of resistance and ensure the prolonged efficacy of new treatments in the future.

Nature Microbiology

10.1038/s41564-024-01891-8

Experimental study

Cells

ESKAPE pathogens rapidly develop resistance against antibiotics in development in vitro

13-Jan-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Anett Nagy-Demcsák
HUN-REN Szegedi Biológiai Kutatóközpont
demcsak.anett@brc.hu

How to Cite This Article

APA:
HUN-REN Szegedi Biológiai Kutatóközpont. (2025, January 30). Antibiotics of the future are prone to bacterial resistance. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80E2GN38/antibiotics-of-the-future-are-prone-to-bacterial-resistance.html
MLA:
"Antibiotics of the future are prone to bacterial resistance." Brightsurf News, Jan. 30 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80E2GN38/antibiotics-of-the-future-are-prone-to-bacterial-resistance.html.