520 likes | 683 Views
MICROBIOLOGY – ALCAMO. LECTURE: Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics. Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics. For centuries, doctors thought that drastic measures were necessary to save a patient from infectious disease: ____________ and ____________ Large doses of chemicals
E N D
MICROBIOLOGY – ALCAMO LECTURE: Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics
Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics • For centuries, doctors thought that drastic measures were necessary to save a patient from infectious disease: • ____________ and ____________ • Large doses of chemicals • Ice water baths • ____________ • These treatments probably made a bad situation worse
Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics • In 1825, doctors in Boston and London wanted to see what would happen if these treatments were not given • They found that no treatment at all was better • For the next 60 years it became the doctor’s job to ________________________, explain it to the family, and sit by caring for the patient
Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics • Late 1800’s – ____________ • ________________________ • Doctors understood where disease comes from but could do little • Tuberculosis killed 1 of every 7 people that died • Streptococcal heart valve disease, pneumonia, and meningitis ____________
Chemotherapeutic Agents and Antibiotics • 1940’s – chemotherapeutic agents and ____________ were discovered • Doctor’s learned that they could kill ____________ in the body without harming the body itself • Doctors were altering the course of ____________ which made a dramatic change in the world
Chemotherapeutic Agents & Antibiotics • Must be more ____________ to MO than host cells • ____________ only helps the immune system to control the infection • The immune system ultimately stops MOs
Chemotherapeutic Agents • Produced in lab, inorganic chemicals • Sulfur, Arsenic, Quinine, Nicotinic Acid • Still major medical applications • Can be quite ____________ to patient
Antibiotics • Originally: Chemical produced by an MO which ____________ ____________of other MOs • Now synthesized in labs, Organic Chem
Chemotherapeutic Agents & Antibiotics • Have ____________ ____________ mechanisms • Select for specific MO according to which life process you need to disrupt: • ____________ ____________ • Cell Wall structure • ___________ ____________ ____________ • RNA or DNA synthesis • Chemical ____________
History of Chemotherapy • Paul ____________ – worked with stains and dyes and found out they had antimicrobial properties • Collaborated with SahachiroHata to produce Salvarsan – 1st chemotherapeutic drug (___________ ) • Problems: • Local reaction at injection site • Church wanted ____________ to be a deterrent to immoral behavior
History of Chemotherapy • For the next 20 years, German scientists kept testing dyes for ____________ ____________ • Gerhard Domagk tested prontosil dye on his own daughter when she became ill with ____________ and she recovered
Sulfa Drugs • It was determined that the active ingredient in prontosil is ____________ • In 1940, D.D. Woods and E.M. Fildes proposed a mechanism of action for ____________ ____________ • It showed how they could interfere with ____________ ____________ without damaging host tissues
Competitive Inhibition • Bacteria need folic acid to produce nucleic acids (____________________ ) • Bacteria have an ____________ to make folic acid – they can’t get folic acid from ____________ like we do • This ____________ joins PABA with 2 other components to make folic acid • Sulfanilimide looks like PABA and ____________ will bind to it instead of PABA
Sulfa Drugs • ____________ : • Sulfamethoxazole • Used for urinary tract infections and pneumonia • ____________ : • Sulfisoxazole • Used for vaginal infections, conjunctivitis and toxoplasmosis
Antibiotics • Word means “___________ _________ ” • Chemical products or derivatives of certain organisms that are ____________ to other organisms • How did organisms gain the ability to produce __________? • Random genetic mutation • Evolutionary advantage
Antibiotics • Mainstay for help with ____________ ____________ . Used for some fungal and protozoal infectionsUseless on ____________ (2ndary BactInf) • Usually ____________ / ____________, some patients dangerously hypersensitive
Alexander Fleming • Discovered ____________ • One of his agar plates containing staphylococci became contaminated with a green mold • He noticed the staphylococci didn’t __________ ____________ ___________ • He identified the mold as a species of ____________ and he named its substance penicillin
Penicillin • Isolated from a fungus - ____________ • First antibiotic, 1940’s • Interferes with cell wall synthesis • Effective against G+ MOsFew G- with massive doses • “____________ : a very large family of drugs
This bacterium is lysing because an antibiotic disrupted its cell wall. Why doesn’t the antibiotic lyse human cells?
Disadvantages of Penicillin • 1. ____________ or allergy • Swelling of the eyes or wrists • Flushed or itchy skin, hives • Shortness of breath • 2. ____________ ____________ bacteria • Produce ____________ , an enzyme that converts penicillin into a useless compound • Use too many ____________ – natural selection of antibiotic resistant bacteria
Semi-synthetic Penicillins • In the 1950’s the beta-lactam nucleus of the ____________ molecule was identified and synthesized • New ____________ were created by attaching different groups to this nucleus: ____________ ____________
Cephalosporin • Isolated from a ____________ - Cephalosporium • Interferes with ____________ ___________ • Similar to ____________ – can be used in allergic persons and with resistant MOs • Interferes with some G+ and some G- MOs
Streptomycin • Isolated from a filamentous (mold-like) soil bacteria - ____________ ____________ • Attaches to ____________ , blocks messenger RNA • Carefully used, toxic side effects (____________ ) • “____________ ” a very large family of drugs • Neosporin contains Neomycin
Chloramphenicol • Streptomyces’ 2nd family of drugs:Original Prod: Chloromycetin • 1st “____________ ____________ ” AntibioticWide variety of G+ and G- MOs • Interferes with protein synthesis, ____________ blocked from mRNA
Tetracycline • ____________ ____________ antibiotics • Can be taken orally and were used widely in the 1950’s and 1960’s • Overused, so __________ ________was eliminated from the intestines • Then ____________ (Candida albicans) flourished and antifungal antibiotics had to be taken • Also caused gray-brown tooth ____________
Antimicrobial Drugs • ____________ : The use of drugs to treat a disease • ____________ ____________ : Interfere with the growth of microbes within a host • ____________ : A substance produced by a microbe that, in small amounts, inhibits another microbe • ____________ ____________ : A drug that kills harmful microbes without damaging the host
The Action of Antimicrobial Drugs • ____________ • Kill microbes directly • ____________ • Prevent microbes from growing
Antibiotic Assays • 1. ____________ ____________ ____________ – determines the smallest amount of antibiotic necessary to inhibit a test organism • Prepare a set of tubes with different ____________ of an antibiotic • The tubes are ____________ with the test organism, incubated and examined for growth • Extent of ____________ gets lower with increasing concentration of antibiotic • When growth ____________ to occur – you have reached the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)
Antibiotic Assays • 2. Agar or disk ____________ ____________ – operates on the principle that antibiotics will diffuse from a paper disk into agar medium containing test organisms • ____________ ____________ as a failure of an organism to grow in the region of the antibiotic
Kirby-Bauer Test • 1. ____________ ____________ into plate and inoculate with test organism • 2. ____________ ____________ ____________ containing known concentrations of antibiotics to the surface • 3. ____________ plate • 4. ____________ ____________ of zones of inhibition to a standard table to determine if test organism is susceptible **If organism is susceptible, it will be killed in patient’s blood stream if experimental concentration of antibiotic is reached
Antibiotic Resistance and Abuse • During past 25 years, a large # of bacterial species have evolved with ____________________________________ • ____________ organisms are responsible for human diseases in: • Intestines, lungs, skin, urinary tract • Common diseases that used to be easy to treat with a single dose of ____________ are now hard to treat: • Bacterial pneumonia, strep throat, gonorrhea
Antibiotic Resistance and Abuse • How do MOs ____________ ____________ ?: • Production of ____________ capable of destroying antibiotic (penicillinase) • Changes in ____________ of cell wall • ____________ to drug’s activity by bypassing a normal metabolic pathway and creating an altered one (new way to produce folic acid)
Antibiotic Resistance and Abuse • ____________ ____________ may develop: • Normally - mutation • From doctors prescribing too many antibiotics – forced evolution • From hospitals using too high doses of post-surgery antibiotics – forced evolution • From livestock feeds which contain 40% of all antibiotics produced in U.S. – forced evolution
Antibiotic Resistance and Abuse Can resistance be transferred?? • Researchers ____________ ____________ antibiotic resistance genes from one bacterial species to another using plasmids • There is potential for the transfer of antibiotic resistance from a harmless bacterium to a pathogenic bacterium • Result – ____________ ____________
Antibiotic Resistance and Abuse • ____________ have been known as miracle drugs – they are overworked miracles • Suggestions have been made to ____________ their use as strictly as narcotics are controlled • But, antibiotics are ____________ in 3rd world countries where they are sold over-the-counter