In the context of microbiology,selective toxicityis the idea that a chemical agent or drug can exert a toxic effect on a pathogen and leave the infected host organism unharmed.
Antimicrobial drugs such as penicillin, metronidazole and chloramphenicol interact with cellular components that are only found in their target organism. This allows the agent to exert its effect only on the cells that carry the target component, for example, an enzyme involved in building a cell wall or a specific metabolic ribozyme.
微生物突变,改变目标公司mponent may occur meaning the drug may no longer exert its toxic effect. If the antimicrobial agent is present and actively killing off unmutated competing sister cells at the time, the mutated cell may have a survival advantage.
The proliferation of mutant cells can lead to antimicrobial resistance which can worsen should the resistant gene be transferred to other microorganisms.
A summary of different agent types and their selectively toxic features is shown below:
