Title: Antimicrobials 1: Origins and modes of action
1Antimicrobials 1 Origins and modes of action
2Objectives of lecture
- Antibiotic discovery
- Time-line of currently prescribed antibiotics
- General principles of antimicrobial agents
- How antibiotics inhibit or kill bacteria
- Introduction to all antibiotic classes
3Definitions
- Antibiotic is a naturally occurring substance
that inhibits or kills bacteria - Antibacterial is a natural, semi-synthetic or
synthetic substance that inhibits bacteria - Antimicrobial agent is a natural, semi-synthetic
or synthetic substance that inhibits microbes
4Antibiotic discovery
- 19th Century
- Louis Pasteur Identified bacteria as causative
agent of - Robert Koch disease. (Germ theory)
- Now know what is causing disease, need to find
out how to stop it. - 1877 Pasteur Soil bacteria injected into
animals made Anthrax harmless -
- 1888 de Freudenreich Isolated product from
bacteria with antibacterial properties. Toxic
and unstable.
5Antibiotic discovery
- 20th Century
- Erhlich Worked with dyes and arsenicals worked
against Trypanosomes, very toxic. - 1st antibacterial, only cured syphilis.
- Domagk Research on dyes.
- 1st synthetic antibacterial in clinical use.
Prontosil cured streptococcus diseases in
animals. - Active component sulphonamide group
attached to dye. - Toxic.
- Sulphonamide derivatives still used.
- Less toxic.
6Antibiotic discovery
- 20th Century
- Fleming and Plates left on bench over
weekend. - serendipity (1928) Staphylococcus colonies
lysed/killed. - Fungi beside Staphylococcus.
- Hypothesis Fungi lysed Staph.
- Unable to purify in large quantities.
- No animal or human tests performed.
7Antibiotic discovery
- 20th Century
- Florey, Chain Purified the penicillin from the
fungus. - and Heatley (1939)
-
-
- 1940s (World War II) European and US
cooperation led to increased scale production
of penicillin. -
-
8Antibiotic discovery
- 20th century
- Waksman (1943) Isolated streptomycin from soil
bacteria Streptomyces. -
- Effective against Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and gram negatives . -
- Toxic antibiotic. Used until 1950s when
isoniazid used due to shorter course of
therapy.
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10General Principles
- Selective toxicity
- The essential property of an antimicrobial drug
that equips it for systemic use in treating
infections is selective toxicity - Drug must inhibit microorganism at lower
concentrations than those that produce toxic
effects in humans - No antibiotic is completely safe
11General Principles
- Oral and Parental
- Oral antibiotics must be able to survive stomach
acid - Advantage Ease and reduced cost
- Disadvantage Circuitous route, antibiotic passes
to lower bowel - Parental antibiotics given by i.v.
- Advantage Direct route to site of infection
- Disadvantage Increased cost and need for
qualified staff
12General Principles
- Half-Lives
- The length of time it takes for the activity of
the drug to reduce by half - Short half lives require frequent dosing
- Old antibiotics have short half lives
- New antibiotics may have half lives up to 33 hours
13General Principles
- Broad and Narrow spectrum antimicrobials
- Broad spectrum antibiotics inhibit a wide range
of bacteria - Narrow spectrum antibiotics inhibit a narrow
range of bacteria - Broad spectrum desirable if infecting organism
not yet identified - Narrow spectrum preferable when organism has been
identified
14General Principles
- Bactericidal or bacteriostatic action
- Bactericidal antibiotics kill bacteria
- Bacteriostatic antibiotics inhibit the bacterial
growth - Bacteriostatic antibiotics may work as well as
bactericidal antibiotics if they sufficiently
arrest the bacterial growth to enable the immune
system to eliminate the bacteria
15General Principles
- Combinations of antibiotics
- Some antibiotics work better together than alone
- Combining 2 or more drugs may be required to
prevent the emergence of resistance e.g.
tuberculosis - Combinations should not be given when 1 drug
would suffice - Antagonistic effects
- No ability to adjust 1 drug concentration
16Modes of action
- Antimicrobial agents inhibit 5 essential
- bacterial processes
- Protein synthesis
- Folic acid synthesis
- DNA synthesis
- RNA synthesis
- Cell wall synthesis
17Protein synthesis inhibitors
- Protein synthesis
- DNA mRNA
Protein - transcription translation
- Ribosome is a protein factory in bacteria takes
mRNA in and - produces proteins from them.
- Bacterial ribosome has 2 parts
- 30S binds to mRNA to translate mRNA into amino
acids, which form proteins - 50S required for peptide elongation
- 3 phases from mRNA to protein
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
18Protein synthesis inhibitors
- Aminoglycosides
- Macrolides/Ketolides
- Tetracyclines
- Lincomycins
- Chloramphenicol
- Oxazolidinones
19Protein synthesis inhibitors
- Bind irreversibly to ribosome
- Ribosome cannot bind to mRNA to form amino acid
chains (30S) or elongate the chains to form
proteins (50S) - Disruptive effect on many essential bacterial
functions leading to cell death
202. Folic acid synthesis inhibitors
- pterdine para-amino benzoic acid
-
-
-
- dihydropterate
-
- dihydrofolate
-
- tetrahydrofolate
- DNA/RNA
Sulphamethoxazole (Sulphonamides) Structural
analogues of PABA
Dihydropteroate synthetase
Dihydrofolate reductase
Trimethoprim (Diaminopyrimidines) Binding
21Reasons for combining Trimethoprim and
Sulphonamides
- There is synergy between the two drugs - the
combined effect is greater that the expected sum
of their activities - Individually the drugs are bacteriostatic
however, in combination they are bactericidal - The use of two drugs will delay the emergence of
resistance
223. DNA synthesis inhibitors
- Enzymes required for DNA replication
- Topoisomerase II (DNA gyrase) GyrA and GyrB
- Topoisomerase IV ParC and ParE
- Quinolones interact/bind to the topoisomerases,
which stops DNA replication e.g. nalidixic acid,
ciprofloxacin
23Action of fluoroquinolones
GyrA/GyrB
DNA gyrase
DNA
ParC/ParE
Topoisomerase IV
Quinolones
Cell death
24DNA synthesis inhibitors
- Metronidazole
- Nitro group is reduced by bacterial enzyme
- Produces short-lived, highly cytotoxic free
radicals that disrupt the DNA - Similar effect to UV radiation on cell DNA
254. RNA synthesis inhibitors
- Rifampicin
- Forms a stable complex with bacterial
DNA-dependent RNA polymerase - Prevents chain initiation process of DNA
transcription - Mammalian RNA synthesis not affected as RNA
polymerase is much less sensitive to rifampicin
265. Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
- Vancomycin
- Bacitracin
- ß-lactams
- Penicillins
- Cephalosporins
- Carbapenems
- Monobactams
- ß-lactamase inhibitors
- Clavulanic acid
- Sulbactam
- Tazobactam
27Action of Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
N-acetyl-glucosamine (NAG)
Phospho-enol pyruvate
Peptidoglycan formation 1. Building Blocks
N-acetyl-muramic acid (NAMA)
L-alanine D-glutamic acid L-lysine
D-ala-D-ala
D-ala
L-ala
28Action of Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Lipid carrier
NAG
Bacitracin inhibits
5 gly
Vancomycin Teicoplanin binds, prevents enzyme
polymerisation
Phospholipid
5 gly
29Action of Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Polymerisation
30Action of Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Transpeptidation
b-lactams resemble D-ala-D-ala, bind to enzyme,
inhibit cross-linking
D-ala
D-ala
D-ala
D-ala
D-ala
D-ala
L-lys
L-lys
L-lys
D-glu
D-glu
D-glu
L-ala
L-ala
L-ala
NAMA
NAG
NAMA
NAG
NAMA
NAG
31Penicillin Binding Proteins Enzymes involved in
cell wall formation
- Reseal cell as new peptidoglycan layers added
- Penicillins bind to PBPs block enzyme
cross-linking chains - Weak cell wall
- Build up osmotic pressure
- Lysis
32Keynote points
- Recent history of antibiotic discovery
- General principles of antibiotic action
- 5 modes of action
- Examples of each