Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 5 - tetracyclines Flashcards

1
Q

What is the principle of the inhibition of protein synthesis in antibiotics?

A

Selective inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis by interference with functions of the 70S ribosome has yielded many clinically important antibiotics
- macrolides (MLS)
- tetracyclines
- AGACs
- chloramphenicol
- oxazolidinone

Ø The majority of existing inhibitors bind to the 16s or 23s rRNA components of the ribosome

Ø The diversity of inhibitor structures reflects the existence of multiple binding sites in rRNA arising from the variety of secondary and tertiary structural arrangements presented by these macromolecules

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2
Q

Which part of the ribosome do most protein synthesis inhibitors bind to?

A

16S or 23S rRNA components

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3
Q

Why is there such a diversity in inhibitor structures?

A

The diversity of inhibitor structures reflects the existence of multiple binding sites in rRNA arising from the variety of secondary and tertiary structural arrangements presented by these macromolecules

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4
Q

Give examples of types of tetracyclines

A

Tetracycline
Doxycycline
Minocycline
Tigecycline

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5
Q

What is the target of tetracyclines?

A

30s ribosome

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6
Q

Give examples of macrolides

A

Erythromycin
Azithromycin
Clarithromycin

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7
Q

What is the target of macrolides?

A

50s ribosome

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8
Q

Give examples of aminoglycoside-aminocyclitol (AGAC) antibiotics

A

Amikacin
Streptomycin
Gentamicin
Tobramycin

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9
Q

What are the advantages of aminoglycoside-aminocyclitol (AGAC) antibiotics?

A

Useful in penicillin allergic patients

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10
Q

What is the target of aminoglycoside-aminocyclitol (AGAC) antibiotics?

A

30s ribosome

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11
Q

Give an example of a lincosamide

A

Clindamycin

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12
Q

What is the target of lincosamides?

A

50s ribosome

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13
Q

What is the target of chloramphenicol?

A

50s ribosome

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14
Q

What is the mechanism of tetracyclines?

A

Tetracycline binds to a single site in the 30s ribosomal subunit
- involves a region of 16s ribosomal RNA which contains base 892
- aminoacyl tRNA anti-codon is spatially proximal to the 16s RNA region containing base number 1400
- tetracyclines interfere with the folding of the 892-1400 region and hence aminoacyl tRNA from binding

Once inside the cell, tetracyclines bind reversibly to the 30S ribosomal subunit at a position that blocks the binding of the aminoacyl-tRNA to the acceptor site on the mRNA-ribosome complex

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15
Q

What does MLS stand for?

A

Macrolides
Lincosamides
Steptogramins

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16
Q

What is the mechanism of MLS antibiotics?

A

MLS selectively inhibit protein synthesis by binding the 50s subunit
MLS are bacteriostatic
- they do not kill bacteria
- prevents multiplication of bacteria
- reversible

Macrolides - binding of macrolides causes dissociation of peptidyl-tRNA from ribosomes
Macrolides block translocation
- causes release of an incomplete polypeptide from the ribosome
Streptogramins are bacteriostatic when used individually but bactericidal when Quinupristin/Dalfopristin are used together