Antimicrobial Activity of Metals and Metalloids

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  • Yuan Ping Li
  • Ibtissem Ben Fekih
  • Ernest Chi Fru
  • Aurelio Moraleda-Munoz
  • Li, Xuan Ji
  • Barry P. Rosen
  • Masafumi Yoshinaga
  • Christopher Rensing
Competition shapes evolution. Toxic metals and metalloids have exerted selective pressure on life since the rise of the first organisms on the Earth, which has led to the evolution and acquisition of resistance mechanisms against them, as well as mechanisms to weaponize them. Microorganisms exploit antimicrobial metals and metalloids to gain competitive advantage over other members of microbial communities. This exerts a strong selective pressure that drives evolution of resistance. This review describes, with a focus on arsenic and copper, how microorganisms exploit metals and metalloids for predation and how metal- and metalloid-dependent predation may have been a driving force for evolution of microbial resistance against metals and metalloids.
Original languageEnglish
Article number9
JournalAnnual Review of Microbiology
Volume75
Number of pages23
ISSN0066-4227
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

ID: 276178881