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Antimicrobial Drugs. How were antimicrobial drugs first discovered?. Alexander Fleming 1928 S. aureus, Penicillium notatum Mass production: 1940s Antibiosis Lead to antibiotic Different from chemotherapy!. Where do antibiotics come from?. From other bacteria found in Soil Bacteria
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How were antimicrobial drugs first discovered? • Alexander Fleming • 1928 • S. aureus, • Penicillium notatum • Mass production: 1940s • Antibiosis • Lead to antibiotic • Different from chemotherapy!
Where do antibiotics come from? • From other bacteria found in • Soil • Bacteria • Streptomyces: more than half! • Bacillus • Molds • Penicillium • Cephalosporium
What is an antibiotic’s spectrum? • Number/types of organisms it affects • Narrow spectrum of antibiotic activity • Penicillin G: mostly only gram + • Broad spectrum antibiotic activity • Tetracycline • Pros vs cons • Lead to superinfections
How do antimicrobial drugs work? • Depends on the drug • Bactericidal or bacteristatic • Modes of action include • Cell wall destruction • Inhibiting transcription or translation • Plasma membrane damage • Inhibiting DNA synthesis • Inhibiting synthesis of metabolites
How can an antibiotic destroy the cell wall? • Penicillin and others • Prevent synthesis (crosslinking) • Cell then lyses due to weakened wall • Only affects actively growing cells • Does not affect humans
Can you discuss some examples? • Penicillin • Penicillin G • Narrow spectrum, penicillinase susceptible • Penicillinase-resistant penicillins • Methicillin • MRSA • Replacing methicillin: oxacillin, nafcillin • Extended spectrum penicillins • Ampicillin, amoxicillin • Effective against both gram + and – • Cephalosporins • Penicillinase resistant, gram – effective • Vancomycin • Narrow spectrum • Last resort
How can they inhibit protein synthesis? • Tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, etc.
How do they injure the PM? • Polypeptide antibiotics (e.g. polymyxin B) • Change permeability of PM
How do they inhibit DNA synthesis? • Limited usefulness… WHY? • Quinolones • Inhibits DNA gyrase • UTIs • Fluoroquinolones • Ciprofloxacin (Cipro) • Affects cartilage development • Can be used in adults
How do they inhibit synthesis of important metabolites? • Competitive inhibition • Synthetic drug • Sulfaniamide inhibits para-aminobenzoic acid (PABA) • PABA is precursor for making folic acid • Sulfa prevents conversion • Humans don’t make folic acid, we eat it! • Broad spectrum
What are some antifungal drugs? • Many target fungal sterols • Ergosterol vs. (humans) cholesterol • Azoles • Athlete’s foot, yeast infection treatment • Others target chitin cell wall • Echinocandins • Many others which we won’t worry about…
What about antiviral drugs? • Very few… WHY???? • Drugs can attack • Attachment • Penetration • Uncoating • DNA/RNA synthesis • Virion assembly
Can you tell me about a couple? • Nucleosides and nucleotide analogs • Acyclovir: genital herpes • Interferons
What tests are used to identify antimicrobial activity? • Disk-diffusion • Can’t determine bactericidal vs. stasis • Gradient diffusion • Broth dilution • Can determine bactericidal vs. -stasis
Effects of Combinations of Drugs • Synergism occurs when the effect of two drugs together is greater than the effect of either alone • Antagonism occurs when the effect of two drugs together is less than the effect of either alone
Is there a downside to antimicrobial or antibiotic use? • Yes! • Natural selection • Antibiotics • Always take the full prescription • They don’t work on viruses!
What types of resistance are there? • video • Destruction of the drug (e.g. penicillinase) • Prevention of drug penetration • Common with tetracycline • Alteration of drug target site • Rapid efflux • Heredity • Transformation, transduction, transposons
Future of Chemotherapeutic Agents • Antimicrobial peptides • Broad-spectrum antibiotics • Nisin (lactic acid bacteria) • Magainin (frogs) • Cecropin (moths) • Antisense agents • Complementary DNA that binds • a pathogen's virulence gene(s) • and prevents transcription • Fomivirsen to treat CMV retinitis • siRNA • Complementary RNA that binds mRNA to inhibit translation