All Stories

  1. Enhancement of β-Lactam-Mediated Killing of Gram-Negative Bacteria by Lysine Hydrochloride
  2. Interplays of mutations in waaA, cmk, and ail contribute to phage resistance in Yersinia pestis
  3. Bicyclomycin Activity against Multidrug-Resistant Gram-Negative Pathogens
  4. Nigericin is effective against multidrug resistant gram-positive bacteria, persisters, and biofilms
  5. Fluoroquinolone heteroresistance, antimicrobial tolerance, and lethality enhancement
  6. A broadly applicable, stress-mediated bacterial death pathway regulated by the phosphotransferase system (PTS) and the cAMP-Crp cascade
  7. MicroPET imaging of bacterial infection with nitroreductase-specific responsive 18F-labelled nitrogen mustard analogues
  8. In Situ Live Imaging of Gut Microbiota
  9. Gain-of-Function Mutations in Acid Stress Response (evgS) Protect Escherichia coli from Killing by Gallium Nitrate, an Antimicrobial Candidate
  10. Cytokine storm induced by SARS-CoV-2 infection: The spectrum of its neurological manifestations
  11. Bacterial death from treatment with fluoroquinolones and other lethal stressors
  12. Rapid and dynamic detection of antimicrobial treatment response using spectral amplitude modulation in MZO nanostructure-modified quartz crystal microbalance
  13. Early stage detection of Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilm formation using MgZnO dual-gate TFT biosensor
  14. Magnesium Zinc Oxide Nanostructure-Modified Multifunctional Sensors for Full-Scale Dynamic Monitoring of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilm Formation
  15. Reactive oxygen species play a dominant role in all pathways of rapid quinolone-mediated killing
  16. Emergence of carbapenem resistance in Bacteroides fragilis in China
  17. Post-stress bacterial cell death mediated by reactive oxygen species
  18. Antimicrobial-Mediated Bacterial Suicide
  19. Heteroresistance: A Harbinger of Future Resistance
  20. Suppression of Reactive Oxygen Species Accumulation Accounts for Paradoxical Bacterial Survival at High Quinolone Concentration
  21. Contribution of reactive oxygen species to thymineless death in Escherichia coli
  22. IFN-ε protects primary macrophages against HIV infection
  23. Spoligotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex Isolates by Use of Ligation-Based Amplification and Melting Curve Analysis
  24. Dimethyl Sulfoxide Protects Escherichia coli from Rapid Antimicrobial-Mediated Killing
  25. Resveratrol Antagonizes Antimicrobial Lethality and Stimulates Recovery of Bacterial Mutants
  26. Suppression of gyrase-mediated resistance by C7 aryl fluoroquinolones
  27. Involvement of Holliday Junction Resolvase in Fluoroquinolone-Mediated Killing of Mycobacterium smegmatis
  28. Ribosomal Elongation Factor 4 Promotes Cell Death Associated with Lethal Stress
  29. Moving forward with reactive oxygen species involvement in antimicrobial lethality
  30. Reactive oxygen species and the bacterial response to lethal stress
  31. Lethal synergy involving bicyclomycin: an approach for reviving old antibiotics
  32. Fluoroquinolone-Gyrase-DNA Complexes
  33. Quinolones☆
  34. Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection is associated with subacute cough
  35. Superoxide-Mediated Protection of Escherichia coli from Antimicrobials
  36. YihE Kinase Is a Central Regulator of Programmed Cell Death in Bacteria
  37. Inhibitors of Reactive Oxygen Species Accumulation Delay and/or Reduce the Lethality of Several Antistaphylococcal Agents
  38. Induction of Mycobacterial Resistance to Quinolone Class Antimicrobials
  39. Fluoroquinolone Resistance: Mechanisms, Restrictive Dosing, and Anti-Mutant Screening Strategies for New Compounds
  40. A Toxin-Antitoxin Module in Bacillus subtilis Can Both Mitigate and Amplify Effects of Lethal Stress
  41. Fluoroquinolone and Quinazolinedione Activities against Wild-Type and Gyrase Mutant Strains of Mycobacterium smegmatis
  42. Mutant Prevention Concentration-Based Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Indices as Dosing Targets for Suppressing the Enrichment of Levofloxacin-Resistant Subpopulations of Staphylococcus aureus
  43. Multicolor Combinatorial Probe Coding for Real-Time PCR
  44. Contribution of reactive oxygen species to pathways of quinolone-mediated bacterial cell death
  45. Escherichia coli genes that reduce the lethal effects of stress
  46. Quinolones: Action and Resistance Updated
  47. Contribution of Oxidative Damage to Antimicrobial Lethality
  48. Quinolones
  49. Lateral Flow Immunoassay Using Europium Chelate-Loaded Silica Nanoparticles as Labels
  50. Antimicrobial Studies with the Pseudomonas aeruginosa Two-Allele Library Require Caution
  51. A unified anti-mutant dosing strategy
  52. Minimising moxifloxacin resistance with tuberculosis
  53. Mutant Selection Window Hypothesis: A Framework for Anti-mutant Dosing of Antimicrobial Agents
  54. Daptomycin inoculum effects and mutant prevention concentration with Staphylococcus aureus
  55. Quinolone-Mediated Bacterial Death
  56. Mutant Selection Window Hypothesis Updated
  57. The Mutant Selection Window in Rabbits Infected withStaphylococcus aureus
  58. Bactericidal activity and target preference of a piperazinyl-cross-linked ciprofloxacin dimer with Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli
  59. Lethal fragmentation of bacterial chromosomes mediated by DNA gyrase and quinolones
  60. Mutant prevention concentration for ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin with Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  61. Lethal Action of Quinolones against a Temperature-Sensitive dnaB Replication Mutant of Escherichia coli
  62. Low Correlation between MIC and Mutant Prevention Concentration
  63. Selection of rifampicin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus during tuberculosis therapy: concurrent bacterial eradication and acquisition of resistance
  64. Lethality of Quinolones against Mycobacterium smegmatis in the Presence or Absence of Chloramphenicol
  65. Are the new quinolones appropriate treatment for community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus?
  66. Is ‘dosing-to-cure’ appropriate in the face of antimicrobial resistance?
  67. Clarification of MPC and the mutant selection window concept
  68. Emergence of resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae in an in vitro dynamic model that simulates moxifloxacin concentrations inside and outside the mutant selection window: related changes in susceptibility, resistance frequency and bacterial killing
  69. Fluoroquinolone-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
  70. Mutant Prevention Concentration of Garenoxacin (BMS-284756) for Ciprofloxacin-Susceptible or -Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
  71. Resistance to Levofloxacin and Failure of Treatment of Pneumococcal Pneumonia
  72. Restricting the Selection of Antibiotic‐Resistant Mutant Bacteria: Measurement and Potential Use of the Mutant Selection Window
  73. Selection of Streptococcus pneumoniae Mutants Having Reduced Susceptibility to Moxifloxacin and Levofloxacin
  74. Enhancement of Fluoroquinolone Activity by C-8 Halogen and Methoxy Moieties: Action against a Gyrase Resistance Mutant of Mycobacterium smegmatis and a Gyrase-Topoisomerase IV Double Mutant of Staphylococcus aureus
  75. Fluoroquinolones as pneumococcal therapy: closing the barn door before the horse escapes
  76. Restricting the Selection of Antibiotic‐Resistant Mutants: A General Strategy Derived from Fluoroquinolone Studies
  77. Fluoroquinolone‐ResistantStreptococcus pneumoniaeAssociated with Levofloxacin Therapy
  78. gyrB-225, a mutation of DNA gyrase that compensates for topoisomerase I deficiency: investigation of its low activity and quinolone hypersensitivity
  79. Mutant Prevention Concentrations of Fluoroquinolones for Clinical Isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae
  80. Mutant Prevention Concentration as a Measure of Fluoroquinolone Potency against Mycobacteria
  81. Mutant Prevention Concentration as a Measure of Antibiotic Potency: Studies with Clinical Isolates ofMycobacterium tuberculosis
  82. Selective Targeting of Topoisomerase IV and DNA Gyrase in Staphylococcus aureus: Different Patterns of Quinolone- Induced Inhibition of DNA Synthesis
  83. Selection of Antibiotic‐Resistant Bacterial Mutants: Allelic Diversity among Fluoroquinolone‐Resistant Mutations
  84. Gatifloxacin Activity against Quinolone-Resistant Gyrase: Allele-Specific Enhancement of Bacteriostatic and Bactericidal Activities by the C-8-Methoxy Group
  85. Cytotoxic Hammerhead Ribozymes
  86. DNA topoisomerase targets of the fluoroquinolones: A strategy for avoiding bacterial resistance
  87. The effect of methylation outside the recognition sequence of restriction endonuclease PvuII on its cleavage efficiency
  88. Controlling Antibiotic Resistance: Strategies Based on the Mutant Selection Window
  89. An Anti-mutant Approach for Antimicrobial Use