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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2002 Nov;59(11):1928–1933. doi: 10.1007/PL00012515

Cellular and molecular aspects of drugs of the future: meropenem

P Cottagnoud 1
PMCID: PMC11337433  PMID: 12530523

Abstract.

Meropenem, first synthesized in the late eighties, has become one of the most important β-lactam antibiotics of the carbapenem subclass used for the treatment of a variety of life-threatening infections. Due to its unique chemical structure, meropenem is not inactivated by the kidney dehydropeptidase I and the majority of microbial beta-lactamases. Its antimicrobial activity is based on its high affinity for the majority of cell wall-synthesizing enzymes, the so-called penicillin-binding proteins, of Gram-positive and -negative bacteria. However, bacteria have evolved several approaches to resist meropenem: (i) by reducing the affinity of the penicillin-binding proteins for the antibiotics, (ii) by decreasing the permeability of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, (iii) by using efflux pumps, and (iv) by activating zinc-dependent carbapenemases. Meropenem has a low toxicity profile and, in contrast to imipenem, no central nervous system toxicity.

Keywords: Key words. Meropenem; antimicrobial action; mechanisms of resistance.

Footnotes

Received 21 February 2002; received after revision 29 May 2002; accepted 11 June 2002


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