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Lecture 19: Antimicrobial Chemotherapy Edith Porter, M.D. 1
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2 History of antimicrobial drug discovery Antimicrobial drugs: definitions and keyproducers Antibacterial drugs Targets Classes Anti-tuberculosis drugs Mechanisms of resistance Antifungal drugs Antiviral drugs Drugs against protozoa and helminths Drugs important for case studies
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Paul Ehrlich develops hypothesis of “magic bullet” while working on dyes and stains Something that selectively finds and destroys a pathogen but does not harm surrounding tissue 1928 Alexander Fleming observes and interprets correctly inhibition of S. aureus by contaminating Penicillium culture Golden age of antimicrobial drug discoveries ~ 1940 – 1960 Since then few new developments for antibacterial drugs
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Must be absorbed Must work in the host without damaging the host Use targets that are specific to microorganism Easier for antibacterial drugs More difficult for drugs against eukaryotic pathogens Very difficult against viruses
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Antibiotic Substance produced by living microorganism that in small quantities inhibits other bacteria (and less often fungi) Note: some antibiotics are anti-cancer drugs Sometimes this term is used for all classes of antimcirobial agents Chemotherapeutic Synthetic antimicrobial drug Newer generation of antibiotics are synthetic versions of naturally occurring antibiotics Antibacterial, antimycobacterial, antifungal, antiviral, antiprotozoan, antiheminthic Antimicrobics Includes all types of drugs used to treat infectious diseases
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-cidal: killing, reducing numbers of viable microbes -static: preventing growth and proliferation Time [h] CFU/ml Add antimicrobial
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Typically soil organisms Bacteria > 50% Streptomyces Bacillus Fungi Penicillium Cephalosporium
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Cell wall Bacitracin Penicillin Cephalosporin Vancomycin Plasma membrane Polymyxin B Antimetabolite Sulfa drugs (inhibit purine and pyrimidine synthesis) Replication Quinolone ▪ Ciprofloxacin Transcription Rifampin Protein synthesis Chloramphenicol Macrolides ▪ Erythromycin Tetracyclin Aminoglycosides ▪ Gentamicin ▪ Streptomycin Streptogramin Oxazolidinones ▪ Against MRSA
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Sulfa drugs among the first synthetic drugs Cotrimoxazol Still in use against urinary tract infections Also for Pneumocystis infection in AIDS Inhibits folic acid synthesis Coenzyme for purine and pyrimidine synthesis Affects nucleic acid and amino acid synthesis Humans take up folic acid with food
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In general Allergies Gastrointestinal disturbances of normal flora (C. difficile pseudomembranous enterocolitis) Penicillin, cephalosporines Allergies Aminoglycosides Oto- and nephrotoxic Tetracycline Discoloration of teeth Chloramphenicol Bone marrow suppression
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Treatment of tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis Slow growth Lipid rich cell wall (mycolic acids) Long term combination therapy Drugs reserved for use in tuberculosis Isoniazid (INH) ▪ Inhibits mycolic acid synthesis Ethambutol ▪ Inhibits mycolic acid incorporation into cell wall Drugs used also elsewhere Rifampin Streptomycin Acid fact stain of lung tissue smear
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Amphotericin B Systemic infections toxic Azoles Clotrimazole, miconazole (topic) Fluconazole (systemic) Echinocandins Flucytosin Griseofulvin Skin, nails (topic) Tolnaftate Athlete’s foot (topic) Plasma membrane (ergosterols) Mitotic microtubuli Cell wall Target Protein synthesis ?
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Antiprotozoan Chloroquine: malaria Metronidazol: giardiasis, amebiasis, trichomoniasis ▪ also active against anaerobic bacteria Antihelminthic Niclosamide ▪ Tapeworms Praziquantel ▪ Tapeworms, flukes Mebendazol ▪ Intestinal round worm
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Act on Virus Inhibitor of neuraminidase Zanamivir, oseltamivir or tamiflu (influenza) Inhibitor of uncoating Amantadine (Influenza) Nucleoside and nucleotide analogs Acyclovir, ganciclovir (Herpes) Reverse transcriptase inhibitors Zidovudine, tenofovir, delavirdine (HIV) Integrase inhibitor Protease inhibitors Indinavir, ritonavir (HIV) Fusion inhibitor Stimulate Host Defense Interferons (Hepatitis)
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Narrow spectrum: active against a few types of microorganisms Broad spectrum: active against various types of microorganisms (including normal flora!)
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Synergism: effect of two drugs together is greater than the effect of either alone Antagonism: effect of two drugs together is less than the effect of either alone
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Outdated, expired antibiotics Antibiotics for the common cold (virus infection) and other inappropriate conditions Use of antibiotics in animal feed Failure to complete the prescribed regimen Using someone else's leftover prescription
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Enzymatic destruction of drug (ß-Lactamases) Prevention of penetration of drug Alteration of drug's target site Rapid ejection of the drug (Efflux Pumps) Resistance genes are often on plasmids or transposons that can be transferred between bacteria
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Antimicrobial peptides Broad spectrum antibiotics Cell membrane targeted Protegrins (from pigs) in clinical trial Nisin Bacterial compound known as food preservative Antisense agents Complementary DNA that binds to a pathogen's virulence gene(s) and prevents transcription siRNA (short interfering RNA)
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Antibiotic is made by a microorganism and inhibits other microorganisms; chemotherapeutica are synthetic Cidal: kills; static: inhibits growth Narrow spectrum antimicrobial affects a few strains, broad spectrum many strains Synergism: more effect than the sum of the effects of each compound alone; antagonism: less effect than the sum of the effect of each component alone Antibacterial/antimycobacterial/antifungal/antiviral/anti protozoan and antihelminthic drugs differ Special regime for tuberculosis Resistance induced by improper use of antibiotics
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Target microorganismSuggested antimicrobial drug Comments MRSA (nosocomial)Vancomycin C. trachomatisDoxycyclineTreat sex partner as well S. typhimuriumNoneSymptomatic primarily (oral fluids) M. tuberculosisINH & Rifampin (ethambutol, pyrazinamid) Combination therapy, at least 6 months – 12 months HIVReverse transcriptase inhibitor Integrase inhibitor Protease inhibitor Combination therapy Severe side effects 26
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