Lec 12-Anti-microbial Resistance Flashcards

1
Q

Antibiotics are natural products

A
  • NP often have many saturated carbons & are thus more three dimensional rather than flat
  • Np- often have many functional groups (H-bond donors and acceptors etc) and are intrinsically more likely to interact with proteins
  • Often have complex fused ring system or macrocyclic rings
  • Often have many chiral centres
  • SIZE= higher MW typically
  • Typically synthetically complex and demanding, often needing years to develop an effective synthesis
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2
Q
A
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3
Q
A
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4
Q

Mechanisms underlying resistance

A
  • Many different mechanisms for resistance
    *
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5
Q

Microbes evolve quickly

A
  1. Generation time of bacteria is very short
    • E.Coli = 17 minutes; Staph.Aureus = 30 min; TB= 850 min; Treponema Pallidum = 1980 min
    • q.v. 1 year or 20 years for large animals
    • E.coli evole 620,000 times faster than us
  2. Horizontal transfer of proteins or whole collections of proteins
    • Millions of years of evolution in a moment
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6
Q

Multi-resistant organism

A
  • Pseudomonas Aeruginosa
  • Burkholderia Cepacia
  • Stenotrophomonas Maltophilia
  • Acinetobacter Baumanii
  • Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
  • Mycobacterium Avium-intracellulare
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7
Q

Bacterial resistance to antimicrobial drugs is an increasing health and economic problem

A
  • Innate resistance- To survive war microbes must be robust in the face of small molecules
  • Acquired resistance- Due to the rapid evolution
    • Bacteria may be resistant to one or several types of anti-microbial agents
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8
Q

Innate resistance- Exclusion

A
  • Gram +Ve bacteria: single cell wall
  • Gram -Ve bacteria: two cell walls + periplasm
  • Gram +Ve bacteria: cell wall only excludes very large (>50 KD) molecules, so uptake of antibiotics is not impeded
  • The outer membrane of Gram -Ve bacteria is a barrier to uptake of antibiotics
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9
Q
A
  • B-lactams; Quinolones; Tetracyclines and macrolides diffuse across the outer membrane via porin channels
  • Aminoglycosides promote their own passage through the outer membrane by binding to LPS
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10
Q

Porins

A
  • Porins are barrel-shaped transmembrane proteins that act as passive pores
  • Loss through mutation can lead to resistance
    • Loss of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa oprD porin used by Imipenem an IV B-lactam anti-biotic increases MIC from 1-2 to 8-32 mg/L (17% rate of resistance reported)
    • No energy use
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11
Q

Innate resistance- efflux

A
  • Antibiotics cross the outer membrane via porin channels or by self-promoted uptake
  • But are removed by energy-consuming efflux pumps before they can act on their targets
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12
Q

Other mechanism

A
  • Overproduce target
    • Target high enough that enough is unligated to function and for bacteria to survive
  • Bypass inhibition
    • Changes to the substrate specificity of the enzyme to which an antibiotic does not bind- allows metabolism to continue
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13
Q

Acquired resistance

A
  • Bacterial population + antibiotic = mutation in bacteria = resistance
  • Resistant bacteria fill ecological niche left by antibiotic-sensitive bacteria
  • The resistant population then grow and thrive
  • When you kill the susceptible bacteria and just leave resistant bacteria, the resistant strain can grow rapidly and fill the ecological niche
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14
Q

Genetic mechanism of antibiotic resistance

A
  • Transformation- direct uptake of DNA containing resistance genes, e.g. altered PBP’s in penicillin-resistant Strep.pneumonia
  • Transposition- Movement of resistance genes from plasmid to genome e.g. VRE
  • Mutation- base changes or deletions lead to altered gene expression e.g. DNA gyrase, DNA polymerase, chromosomal B-lactamase
  • Conjugation- plasmids transferred from other organisms e.g. B-lactamase, AG adnCAT modifying enzymes, mecA (PBP2) in MRSA
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15
Q

Mechanisms to resist antibiotic action

A
  • Inactivation and modification
    • Destroy antibiotic through chemical modification (changes the antibiotic structure so it does bind) (horizontal)
  • Changes in the specific target protein
    • Reduce antibiotic binding to the target (Changes target structure so antibiotic does not bind) (Vertical)
  • Microbes use both mechanisms to resist antibiotic action
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16
Q

Inactivation and modification enzyme

A
  • B-lactamases: over 300 different enzymes identified to date, including penicillinases, cephalosporinases, carbapenemases
    • Clavulanic acid, sulbactam and tazobactam developed as inhibitors
    • Extended-spectrum enzymes now common, inhibitor-resistance also described but rare
  • Aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes
    • Acetylation, phosphorylation, adenylation reaction
    • Amikacin developed to block one common enzyme
  • Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
    • Common in salmonella where chloramphenicol used OTC
17
Q

Changes in target enzymes or substrates

A
  • Penicillin-binding proteins: MecA in MRSA
  • DNA gyrase (gyrA, gyrB): quinolones
  • Dihydrofolate reductase: trimethoprim
  • 23 SrRNA methylation: erythromycin
  • RNA polymerase: Rifampicin
  • D-ala-D-ala to D-ala-D-lac: VRE
  • Peptidoglycan thickness and reduced glutamate amidation: VISA, GISA
18
Q

Approaches to counter antibiotic resistance

A
  • Vaccine
  • Bacteriophages
  • New antibiotics
19
Q

Vaccine

A
  • T cell or Ab-mediated
  • Attenuated whole organism
  • HHeat-inactivated whole organism
  • Chemically inactived whole organism
  • Sub-unit or toxoid
  • carbohydrate epitope
    • lots of experiemental vaccine(peptide)
  • Often need adjuvants (alum, SMA, saponins)
  • Many ways of delivering vaccines (raw DNA, viral vectors, liposomes)
  • No issue with resistance. Once a lifetime to once a year dosing-
20
Q

Bacteriophages

A
  • Viruses that infect and destroy bacteria
  1. Binding
  2. Injection of nucleic acid
  3. Re-programming
  4. Production of phage particles
  5. Assembly
  6. Lysin, lysis and escape
21
Q

Bacteriocins and Antimicrobial peptides (or host defence peptides)

A
  • Bacteriocins- proteins or peptide antibiotics secreted by bacteria to disadvantage other bacteria
  • Antimicrobial peptides
  • Host defence peptides- part of innate immunity (immune system peptides)
22
Q

Antibiotics to counter antibiotic resistance

A
  1. Use existing antibiotics more carefully
    • Antibiotic policies, biocides, hand-washing
  2. Develop existing agents
  3. Target resistance mechanism
    • B-lactamase inhibitors (clavulanic acid, sulbactam, tazobactam) or efflux pump blockers (glycylcyclines, tigecycline)
  4. Develop agents against new targets
    • Topoisomerase IV (alternate DNA gyrase), DNA polymerase, tRNA synthetases, peptide deformylase, membrane-active peptides
  • Bacterial genomics can suggest lots of targets
23
Q

Antibiotic targets

A
  • DNA-directed RNA polymerase= Rifampicin
  • DNA gyrase= Quinolones
  • Folic acid metabolism= Sulphonamides, Trimethoprim
  • Protein synthesis
    • 50S = Macrolide; Chloramphenicol; Clindamycin
    • 70S= Aminoglycosides; tetracycline
    • 50 + 30S complex= Oxazolidinones (linezolid)
24
Q

New agents with activity vs MRSA

A
  • Linezolid = Oxazolidinones = MRSA and VRE
  • Tigecycline = Efflux blocker
  • Daptomycin = MRSA and VRE
25
Q

Other new drugs near to launch

A
  • Arpida iclaprim (DHFR inhibitor)
  • Pfizer Dalbacancin
  • Astella telavancin
  • Targanta oritavancin
  • Forest and takeda ceftaroline
  • Basilea and J&J ceftobiprole
26
Q

Fidaxomicin

A
  • Fidaxomicin (Dificlir) is the first in a new class of macrocyclic antibiotics recently licensed by the European medicines agency (EMA) to treat Clostridium difficile infection (CDI)
  • Trials suggest Fidaxomicin is not inferior to vancomycin for mild to severe CDI
  • Fidaxomicin has not been compared to metronidazole in clinical trials
  • Its side effect profile appears similar to that of oral vancomycin and it may have advantages in reducing the rate of recurrence
27
Q

New Antibiotic

A
  • Active against the microbial target
  • Kills bacteria or interferes with bacterial growth
  • Does not kill ‘good’ bacteria
  • Inactive against humans