Antibiotics and antifungals Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main classes of antibiotic drugs?

A
  1. Sulphonamides
  2. Trimethoprim
  3. Fluoroquinolones
  4. Rifamycins
  5. Macrolides
  6. Glycopeptides
  7. Carbapenems, cephalosporins, penicillins
  8. Polymyxins
  9. Lipopeptide
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2
Q

What are the 4 main steps in prokaryotic protein synthesis? What drugs target each step?

A
  1. Nucleic acid synthesis - sulphonamides, trimethoprim
  2. DNA replication - fluoroquinolones
  3. RNA synthesis - rifamycins
  4. Protein synthesis - macrolides
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3
Q

What drugs are used to treat fungal infections and how do they work?

A
  1. Azoles - inhibit ergosterol production (in fungal CM)

2. Polyenes - bind to ergosterol and make pores in CM

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4
Q

What mechanisms are commonly used by bacteria to become resistant to drugs?

A
  1. Changes to target - change DNA gyrase
  2. Hyperproduction - make more DHFR enzyme
  3. Additional target - make diff. DHFR enzyme
  4. Destruction enzymes - B-lactamases
  5. Alter permeation - increase efflux mechanisms
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5
Q

How do sulphonamides work?

A

Targets DHOp synthase to inhibit NA synthesis

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6
Q

How does trimethoprim work?

A

Targets DHF reductase to inhibit NA synthesis

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7
Q

How do macrolides work?

A

Target ribosomes to inhibit protein synthesis

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8
Q

How do fluoroquinolones work?

A

Target DNA gyrase/topoisomerase IV to inhibit DNA synthesis

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9
Q

How do rifamycins work?

A

Target RNA polymerase to inhibit RNA synthesis

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10
Q

How do glycopeptides work?

A

Target pentapeptide to inhibit peptidoglycan synthesis

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11
Q

How do carbapenems, cephalosporins + penicillins work?

A

Target transpeptidase enzyme involved in PtG incorporation into cell wall

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12
Q

How do polymyxins work?

A

Target LPS to disrupt Gm-ve CMs

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13
Q

How does lipopeptide work?

A

Disrupts Gm+ve cell walls

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14
Q

How is tuberculosis treated?

A
  1. RNA-polymerase inhibitor - rifampicin
  2. Mycolic acid synthesis inhibitors
  3. Pyrazinamide - reduces availability of ribosomes required for protein translation
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15
Q

What are mycobacteria?

A
  • Gram positive w/more complex outer wall
  • Wall contains a PtG-arabinogalactan polymer that binds mycolic acids, pore forming proteins and a number of extractable lipids
  • Gives bacteria a ‘waxy’ outer layer
  • E.g. mycobacteria tuberculosis, mycobacteria leprae
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