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Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

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Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs. What are antibiotics?. Definition: chemicals produced by one microorganism to kill or inhibit the growth of other microorganisms Now included the semi-synthetic antibiotics Effective against bacteria Antibacterial drugs – largest group of antibiotics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Page 2: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

What are antibiotics?Definition: chemicals produced by one

microorganism to kill or inhibit the growth of other microorganisms

Now included the semi-synthetic antibioticsEffective against bacteriaAntibacterial drugs – largest group of

antibioticsGeneral terms used to include other

microbes are antimicrobial drugs or antimicrobials

Difference between disinfectants/antiseptics and antimicrobial drugs

Page 3: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Antibiotic spectrumBroad vs. narrow spectrum

antibioticsBenefits and problems with each

Page 4: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs
Page 5: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Microbes that produce antibiotics:

Bacteria: Bacillus and Streptomyces

Fungi: Cephalosporium and Penicillium

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Page 7: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

How do antibiotics work?

1. must kill pathogen and not kill host

2. fewest sides effects in host; highest toxicity in pathogen

3. exploit differences between the pathogen and the host

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Page 9: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Modes of action of the antibiotics:1. Inhibition of cell wall synthesis

◦ cell wall is weakened by these when cell is growing

◦ ex. penicillin(s) and cephalosporins◦ low toxicity to humans

Page 10: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs
Page 11: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Modes of action of the antibiotics:2. Inhibition of protein synthesis

◦ binding to 70S ribosome◦ differences between 70S and 80S

ribosomes◦ ex. chloramphenicol, erythromycin,

streptomycin, tetracyclines◦ host mitochondria may also be affected

 

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Modes of action of the antibiotics:3. Increase permeability of plasma

membrane◦ ex. polymyxin B – used topically◦ can have high toxicity in humans◦  

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Page 15: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Modes of action of the antibiotics:4. Inhibit synthesis of RNA/DNA

◦ can be very toxic◦ ex. quinolones – DNA

 

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Page 17: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Modes of action of the antibiotics:5. Inhibition of metabolic

pathways◦ ex. sulfanilamide – folic acid pathway◦ low toxicity because of the absence of this

pathway in humans

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Page 19: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Antagonism vs. synergism of 2 or more antibiotics

Antagonism:◦Ex. Tetracycline penicillin (Why?)

Synergism:◦Ex. TMP-SMZ (SMX) trimethoprim

and sulfamethoxazole

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Prophylaxis – preventative use of antibiotics

Ex. of their use:1. before surgery – i.e.

appendix removal

2. before dental work in heart patients

3. in AIDS patients to prevent many infections

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Factors affecting antimicrobial activity in vivo –

1. In the environment

A. metabolic state of pathogenEx. Mycobacterium tuberculosis

B. distribution of drug is different in different tissues Ex. blood/brain barrier and necrotic tissue

C. location of pathogen Ex. Chlamydia inside host cells

D. interfering substances Ex. low pH in stomach; binding to proteins in body, etc.

Page 22: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Factors affecting antimicrobial activity in vivo –

2. Concentration of antibiotics in body

A. absorption, inactivation, excretion

B. distribution of the drug – systemic vs. local vs. topical

C. variability – dosing flutuations, how long antibiotic lasts in the body.

Page 23: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Antiviral drugs

Nucleotide analogs (look similar to the bases + sugars of DNA) Ex. AZT – looks like thymine; acyclovir – looks like guanine

Enzyme inhibitors Ex. reverse transcriptase inhibitor – important in controlling HIV infection

Interferons – naturally produced by our immune systemsEx. alpha, beta, and gamma; prevents further infection

Page 24: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs
Page 25: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Antifungal drugs

Targets for antifungal drugs???Possible side effects???Ex. amphotericin B and

imidazole affect sterol productionGriseofulvin – binds to keratin in

skin cells, treats skin fungal infections

Page 26: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Antibiotic resistance (also called drug resistance)

What is happening?As microbes are exposed to drugs,

the ones with defenses against them survive

Page 27: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

Microbial defense mechanisms against antibiotics

1. Change receptor for drug

2. Bind to drug and inactivate it, ex. penicillinase (b-lactamase)

3. Change target site, ex. change ribosome structure

4. Change metabolic pathway

5. MDR pump– multi-drug resistance pump

Page 28: Chapter 20: Antimicrobial Drugs

How does drug resistance develop in different microbes?

Antibiotics overprescribed and not regulatedMany countries do not require a prescriptionImproper dosageAntibacterial soaps/surfaces, etc.Antibiotics in animals (used as our food

source)People insisting on receiving antibiotics,

even for viral infectionsNosocomial infections and the chronically

infected

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Antibiotic sensitivity tests

Kirby-Bauer test – zones of inhibition

Minimal inhibitory concentration test

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The End