Title: Vaccines
1Dow Jones (3/1/09)
6,827.49 -235.44 -3.33 Open 7,056.48 High
7,058.95 Low 6,820.64 Previous Close 7,062.93
Volume 196,920,003
2Antimicrobials
Joseph Vogel MPRB 10220 jvogel_at_borcim.wustl.edu (M
arch 2, 2009)
3- Antimicrobials -- outline
- Development
- Resistance
- New opportunities
4Before Antibiotics
- Sources
- 1900-1970, U.S. Public Health Service, Vital
Statistics of the United States, annual, Vol. I
and Vol II - 1971-2001, U.S. National Center for Health
Statistics, Vital Statistics of the United
States, annual National Vital Statistics Report
(NVSR) (formerly Monthly Vital Statistics
Report) and unpublished data. - From Statistical Abstract of the United States
20042005.
5The advent of antibiotics played a major role in
improving infant mortality and lifespan
6Penicillin The first antibiotic
- Discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1929
- Mass produced in the 1940s in response to the
war effort - Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and Norman Heatley
credited with developing penicillin as a useful
drug
7Antibiotic Discovery Timeline
Table taken from The Antibiotic Paradox by Dr.
Stuart Levy
8Major Antibiotic Targets
9Christopher Walsh. Nature Reviews Mico. 2003.
165-70.
10Cell wall inhibitors
- b-lactam antibiotics
- Glycopeptides
- Phosphonomycin
- Bacitracin
11?-lactam antibiotics Bind to and inhibit the
activity of transpeptidases that are essential
for crosslinking glycan linked peptide chains in
the bacterial cell wall. Penicillin Ampicillin P
enicillin originally only acted against
Gram-positive bacteria but chemical modifications
have made it functional against Gram-negative
bacteria as well
12Peptidoglycan synthesis
Target of penicillin and glycopeptide antibiotics
13??lactam antibiotics
Q. How might you combat b-lactamases?
14Combating b-lactamases AugmentinTM
Augmentin combination of amoxicillin (b-lactam
antibiotic) clavulanic acid (b-lactamase
inhibitor)
Clavulanic acid
Amoxicillin
- Clavulanic acid binds irreversibly to
b-lactamase via its b-lactam ring, protecting
amoxicillin from denaturation - Augmentin is typically prescribed to treat ear
infections that do not respond to other
antibiotics
15Growth factor analogs sulfa drugs-sulfanilamide,
an analog of p-aminobenzoic acid that blocks
folic acid synthesis isoniazid-interferes with
synthesis of mycobacterial specific cell wall
component mycolic acid
16Sulfa drugs
Used to treat a range of infections including
bronchitis, UTIs, and travelers diarrhea.
17Quinolones Synthetic compounds that interfere
with gyrase and prevent packaging of bacterial
DNA Naladixic Acid Ciprofloxin Quinolones
function against a wide range of bacteria, most
famously given prophylactically following
exposure to anthrax
18Aminoglycosides Amino sugars bonded by glycosidic
linkages. Inhibit protein synthesis at 30S
ribosomal subunit Streptomycin Kanamycin Neomycin
Often give as injectables to treat serious/life
threatening infections. They have significant
side effects including hearing loss and seizures,
and are typically used only when no other
antibiotics are effective.
19Macrolide Antibiotics Lactone rings connected to
sugar moieties. Protein synthesis inhibitors
acting at 50S ribosomal subunit Erythromycin
Erythromycin is particularly effective against
Legionella pneumophila, the cause of
Legionnaires disease. Why???
20Tetracycline First broad spectrum antibiotics.
Protein synthesis inhibitors that interfere with
30S ribosomal subunit
Given topically to treat acne and orally to treat
acne and other infections. Typically not given to
young children since they can stain teeth. Also
used to prevent malaria.
21Cephalosporins Act similarly to ?-lactam
antibiotics by binding to transpeptidases and
preventing crosslinking Cephalexin Cephtriax
one Resistant to ?-lactamases
Used to treat a broad range of infections
including pneumonia, and those in bone, ear and
skin
22???
23- Antimicrobials -- outline
- Development
- Resistance
- New opportunities
24Antibiotic Resistance Early signs that perhaps
the magic bullet was losing its magic
- Fleming warned in 1945 that the misuse of
penicillin could lead to selection of resistant
forms of bacteria (he had derived resistant
strains in his lab by varying the dosage and
growth conditions). - Until the 1950s, penicillin was available over
the counter in the US increasing the chance of
misuse - In 1946, one hospital reported that 14 of staph
isolated from sick patients were penicillin
resistant. - By the end of the decade, the same hospital
reported that resistance had been conferred to
59 of the strains of staph studied. - The first means of combating antibiotic
resistance was the development of modified
forms of penicillin--like ampicillin--that were
resistant to degradation by beta-lactamases.
25(No Transcript)
26- In 2002, the CDC estimated that at least 90,000
deaths a year in the USA could be attributed to
bacterial infections, more than half caused by
bugs resistant to at least one commonly used
antibiotic - Serious infections caused by MRSA (methicillin
resistant Staphylococcus aureus) was close to
100,000/yr with almost 19,000 related fatalities - Methicillin introduced in 1959 (semi-synthetic
penicillins designed in response to penicillin
resistance) - However, within 2 years started to see
resistance due to mecA, which encodes an altered
PBP (mecA probably came from common skin bacteria
Staph sciuri).
27(No Transcript)
28Mechanisms of resistance
- Limiting access of the antibiotic
- Enzymatic inactivation of the antibiotic
- Active efflux of the antibiotic
- Modification or protection of the antibiotic
target
29Mechanisms of resistance
- Limiting access of the antibiotic
- b-lactam antibiotics must transit outer membrane
to reach PBPs in the inner membrane - Porins in the outer membrane limit diffusion and
can mutate to increase resistance - e.g. vancomycin very effective against Gm() but
not Gm(-) because it is too bulky to cross the
outer membrane - Can also get reduced uptake across the inner
membrane (important for antibiotics with
cytoplasmic targets, e.g. ribosomes) - Not common because some antibiotics are membrane
permeant (e.g. hydrophobic tetracycline) - However, aminoglycosides use transporters to get
into cells bacteria are more resistant when
grown anaerobically
30Mechanisms of resistance
- Enzymatic inactivation of the antibiotic
- Best examples are b-lactamases
- b-lactamases are secreted into the periplasm by
Gm(-) into the extracellular fluid by Gm() and
cleaves the b-lactam ring
Satellites around AmpR colonies
Inhibitor of b-lactamase
31Mechanisms of resistance
- Enzymatic inactivation of the antibiotic
- Aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes inactivate the
antibiotic by adding a group (phophoryl, adenyl,
or acetyl group) to the antibiotic - Chloramphenicol or Kanamycin acetyltransferase --
adds an acetyl group to the antibiotic - Streptogramin acetyltransferase -- also add an
acetyl group - Oxidation of tetracycline
N-acetyltranferase encoded by a resistance
plasmid can inactivate by attacking free
aminogroup
32Mechanisms of resistance
- Active efflux of the antibiotic
- Efflux pump -- pumps antibiotic out of the
cytoplasm and prevents it from reaching high
enough concentration - First efflux mechanism discovered mediated
resistance to tetracycline -- cytoplasmic
membrane protein that catalyzed
energy-dependent transport of tet out of the cell - Macrolides can also be pumped out (e.g. Staph)
- Quinolones -- low level resistance
- Streptogramins -- efflux pumps identified
33Mechanisms of resistance
- Modification or protection of the antibiotic
target - Resistance to b-lactams
- Alter the penicillin-binding protein (PBP) so it
no longer binds the b-lactams - Most common in Gm() -- e.g. mecA confers
resistance to methicillin in Staph - Resistance to glycopeptide antibiotics
- Vancomycin prevents peptidoglycan cross-linking
by binding D-Ala-D-Ala of the muramyl-peptide
(NAM) - Can become resistant by replacing D-Ala-D-Ala
with D-Ala-D-lactate, which does not bind
vancomycin - 3 essential enzymes include vanA or vanB (ligase
that makes D-Ala-D-lactate
34Mechanisms of resistance
- Modification or protection of the antibiotic
target - Resistance to glycopeptide antibiotics
- Vancomycin prevents peptidoglycan cross-linking
by binding D-Ala-D-Ala of the muramyl-peptide
(NAM) - Can become resistant by replacing D-Ala-D-Ala
with D-Ala-D-lactate, which does not bind
vancomycin - 3 essential enzymes include
- vanA or vanB ligase that makes D-Ala-D-lactate
- vanH lactate dehydrogenase that makes lactate
from pyruvate - vanX cleaves D-Ala-D-Ala but not
D-Ala-D-lactate (have to get rid of D-Ala-D-Ala
otherwise vancomycin can still bind)
35How to select for resistant bacteria
- Taking antibiotics unnecessarily
- Antibiotics are useful in x lt 20 of patients
seen with an infectious disease. However, they
are prescribed 80 of the time! - Not finishing the prescribed course of
antibiotics - Below optimal dosage is insufficient to eliminate
pathogen and selects for resistant strains - However, not everyone agrees (Science. 2008.
321 356) - A few existing studies suggests that the
necessary length of therapy is surprisingly short
(e.g. UTIs can be treated with 1-3 day course of
antibiotics and vast majority of patients with
pneumonia get better after 2-3 days) - MORE RESEARCH IS NEEDED
36Chart from the CDC indicating when to prescribe
antibiotics
As you can see the answer is RARELY!!!
http//www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/community/tools.
htm
37Antibiotic resistance can then be transferred via
standard routs of gene swapping
Conjugation-Transformation-Transduction
38Conjugation
Salyers and Whitt, Microbiology (2001)
39Generalized Transduction
Salyers and Whitt, Microbiology (2001)
40Transformation
Natural Competence occurs in Streptococcus
pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Bacillus
subtilis
41Horizontal transfer is not species specific!!
Salyers and Whitt, Microbiology (2001)
42Relationship between antibiotic use and frequency
of resistant bacteria
43Drug resistant gonorrheae
44- Antimicrobials -- outline
- Development
- Resistance
- New opportunities
45- Drugs for bad bugs confronting the challenges
of antibacterial discovery - Most large pharm companies and many biotechs have
left the area of antimicrobials (many reasons
but major one was not enough )
Payne et al. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 6,
2940 (January 2007) doi10.1038 / nrd2201
46- Drugs for bad bugs confronting the challenges
of antibacterial discovery - Most large pharm companies and many biotechs have
left the area of antimicrobials (many reasons
but major one was not enough ) - 1995 determination of the Haemophilus influenzae
genome changed everything - GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) spent 7 years (1995-2001)
evaluating more than 300 genes for potential as
targets and showed that 160 were essential genes - 67 high-through-put screens (HTS) of individual
targets were run against the SmithKline Beecham
compound collection (260,000-530,000 compounds) - Only 16 HTS gave rise to hits and only 5 resulted
in leads
47- Drugs for bad bugs confronting the challenges
of antibacterial discovery - Also ran 2 whole-cell antibacterial screens
- Wild type antibiotic sensitive strain of Staph
aureus - Wild type (efflux competent) strain of E. coli
- Up to 500,000 synthetic compounds were screened
at a concentration of 10 mM - Results
- No exploitable hits for the E. coli screen (many
nuisance compounds) - 300 antibacterials against Staph (however most
were ruled out as non-specific membrane-active
agents (detergents and uncouplers)
48- Drugs for bad bugs confronting the challenges
of antibacterial discovery - 70 HTS campaigns run between 1995-2001 (67 target
based and 3 whole cell) --gt 5 leads were
delivered - Success rate is 4-5 fold lower than for targets
from other therapeutic areas at the time - Each HTS campaign costs over US 1 million
- Other companies did just as bad
- X gt 125 antibacterial screens on 60 different
antibacterial targets were run by 34 different
companies - Few/no credible developmental candidates
49- Drugs for bad bugs confronting the challenges
of antibacterial discovery - Why not work???
- Consequence of the lack of chemical diversity
screened at the time? - Asking for too much (e.g. broad spectrum
antibiotics) - New approach
- 2002 GSK overhauled its antibacterial research
strategy - Shifted to a select number of programs with
late-stage leads - Focused on novel, chemical structures -- not
targets -- whose members had excellent in vitro
and in vivo antibacterial activities
50- Lipinski's Rule of Five
- Rule of thumb to evaluate druglikeness, or
determine if a chemical compound with a certain
pharmacological or biological activity has
properties that would make it a likely orally
active drug in humans - Rule was formulated by Christopher Lipinski in
1997 (based on observation that most medication
drugs are relatively small and lipophilic
molecules) - Rule describes molecular properties important
for a drug's pharmacokinetics in the human body,
including their absorption, distribution,
metabolism and excretion (ADME) - Modification of the molecular structure often
leads to better drugs
51- Lipinski's Rule of Five
- Lipinski's rule says an orally active drug has
no more than one violation of the following
criteria - Not more than 5 hydrogen bond donors (nitrogen
or oxygen atoms) with one or more hydrogen
atoms) - Not more than 10 hydrogen bond acceptors
(nitrogen or oxygen atoms) - A molecular weight under 500 daltons
- An octanol-water partition coefficient log P of
less than 5 - Note that all numbers are multiples of five,
- which is the origin of the rule's name (damn
clever!)
52Natural antibiotics tend to be large
53Chemical diversity of antibacterial is different
to other drugs (more hydrophilic and slightly
larger)
Payne et al. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 6,
2940 (January 2007) doi10.1038 / nrd2201
54Other approaches in academics e.g. Pilicides
Rationally designed small compounds inhibit
pilus biogenesis in uropathogenic bacteria.
Pinkner et al. PNAS. 2006 10317897-902.
55Cholera toxin secretion causes intestine to lose
water and induces strong and often lethal diarrhea
56Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Vibrio cholerae
Virulence and Intestinal Colonization (Hung et
al. Science. 2005. 310670)
- Screened 50,000 compound library for those that
inhibit cholera toxin production - One compound shown to inhibit ToxT (an activator
needed for Ctx production) - Compound (termed Virstatin) had no effect on
Vibrio cholerae or other bacterial growth in
vitro - But when tested in a mouse model, Virstatin
reduced bacterial levels 1000 fold and reduced
pathology - Proof of principle for a pathogen specific
compound - Unfortunately many strains of cholera naturally
express a Virstatin-resistant ToxT or use
alternative mechanisms to activate Ctx
57An Inhibitor of FtsZ with Potent and Selective
Anti-Staphylococcal Activity (Haydon et al.
Science. 2008. 3211673)
- Created a class of small synthetic
antibacterials (e.g. PC190723), which inhibits
FtsZ and prevents cell division - PC190723 has potent and selective in vitro
bactericidal activity against staphylococci,
including methicillin- and multi- drug-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus - Putative inhibitor-binding site of PC190723 was
mapped to region of FtsZ analogous to the
Taxol-binding site of tubulin - PC190723 was efficacious in an in vivo model of
infection, curing mice infected with a lethal
dose of S. aureus.
58An Inhibitor of Gram-Negative Bacterial
Virulence Protein Secretion (Felise et al. Cell
Host Microbe. 2008. 4325)
- High-throughput screen for inhibitors of type
III secretion systems (T3SS) - This is your assigned reading!