Lec 3- Cell wall (2) Flashcards

1
Q

Sites of action of anti-bacterial agents- Ribosome (protein synthesis)

A
  • Aminoglycosides-Gentamicin
  • Tetracyclines- oxytetracycline
  • Chloramphenicol
  • Macrolides- clarithromycin
  • Azalides- azithromycin
  • Lincosamides- Lincomycin
  • Oxazolidinones-
  • Mupirocin
  • Fudisic acid
  • Pleuromutillins- retapamulin
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2
Q

Sites of action of anti-bacterial agents- Metabolic (DNA synthesis)

A
  • Anti-folate- lamotrigine
  • Sulphonamides-
  • Trimethoprim
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3
Q

Sites of action of anti-bacterial agents- Cell wall synthesis

A
  • B-Lactams- amoxicillin, cephalosporin C
  • Glycopeptides- Vancomycin
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4
Q

Sites of action of anti-bacterial agents- Chromosome (DNA replication)

A
  • Quinolones-
  • Rifampicin
  • Nitroimidazole
  • Nitrofurans
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5
Q

Sites of action of anti-bacterial agents- Cell membrane disruption

A
  • Polymyxins
  • Daptomycin
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6
Q

Structure

A
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7
Q

Carbapenems

A
  • Thienamycin is a naturally produced carbapenem antibiotic (Streptomyces)- most potent to date
  • Broad spectrum (G+ and G-) and resistant to b-lactamase
  • Can be chemically modified to a range of semi-synthetic carbapenems
    • Imipenem (sensitive to renal peptidase)
    • Meropenem (resistant to renal peptidase)
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8
Q

Monobactams

A
  • Nocardicin A is a naturally produced monobactam b-lactam anti-biotic
  • Aztreonam is a synthetic monobactam resistant to b-lactamases and is the only clinically used monobactam
  • Often tolerated by patients who have hypersensitivity to penicillins
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9
Q

Adverse drug reaction

A
  • Mild adverse drug reaction (ADR)(Hypersensitivity) to penicillins occurs in about 1% of patients (diarrhoea, nausea, rash)
  • 10% tend to report some of these effects but these are often not related to the penicillin
  • This is a type I response (IgE)
  • Believed to be due to haptenization of proteins
  • Cross-sensitivity is low between classes
  • Severe anaphylaxis occurs in around 0.1% mechanism is unclear
    *
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10
Q

Glycopeptide antibiotic

A
  • Vancomycin is a naturally produced by glycopeptide antibiotic (initially isolated from Nocardia Orientalis)
  • Now produced by fermentation
  • Biosynthesis by unusual non-ribosomal peptide synthesis
  • Effective against G+ bacteria- cannot pass additional membrane of G-ve
  • red= sugar (glyco)
  • Green= Peptide (peptide- lots of AA bonded with amide bond)
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11
Q

Glycopeptide antibiotics

A
  • Teicoplanin is another example of a naturally produced glycopeptide antibiotic (Actinoplanes teichomyceticus)
  • Teicoplanin is a mixture of (at least) 5 compounds with the same glycopeptide core- difficult to get past regulatory bodies
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12
Q

Glycopeptide bind to D-ala-D-ala

A
  • Glycopeptide antibiotics block the formation of the peptidoglycan in 2 ways:
    • Preventing the formation of linear glycan (NAG-NAM) strands by transglycosylase
    • Inhibiting peptide cross-linking by transpeptidase
  • They do this by binding tightly to the terminal D-alanyl-D-alanine of the peptidoglycan by hydrogen bonding- due to cage-like shape so D-alanine fits very well- transpeptidase can’t bind
  • Because they don’t get used up (don’t open up ring), so can do many reactions and so continue to bind
  • Used for the resistant organism- is starting to emerge but this is very weak, it is hard to come up with resistance because it’s not a covalent reaction
    *
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13
Q

Detail Gram-positive cell wall structure

A
  • Transpeptidase- removes terminal D-alanine and cross-links the peptides with pentaglycine
  • Transglycosylase- extends the glycan chains
    • Glycopeptide anti-biotics also inhibits the glycan chain
  • Anti-biotics come to have to come up with 2 different mechanisms of resistance to become effective against glycoprotein anti-biotic making it even harder
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14
Q

Mode of action of vancomycin

A
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