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2/28/2016 ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS Dr. Waleed Eldars Lecturer of Medical Microbiology and Immunology Faculty of Medicine Mansoura University Anti-Microbial Agents Definition: include antibiotics, anti-viral and anti-fungal drugs. Mechanism of action of clinically used antibiotics: • Inhibition of cell wall synthesis. • Alteration of cell- membrane permeability. • Inhibition of protein synthesis. • Inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis. • Other mechanisms of action. 1 2/28/2016 2/28/2016 5:08:39 PM 3 Dr. Medhat A. Eldaker A)Cell Wall Inhibitors Cell wall inhibitors β- Lactams Penicillins Glycopeptides Cephalosporins Dr. Medhat A. Eldaker Polypeptides Monobactams Carbapenems Aztreonam Imipenem 2/28/2016 5:08:39 PM 2 2/28/2016 Cell Wall Inhibitors I. β Lactam antibiotics 1. Penicillin 2. Monobactam 3. Carbapenem 4. Cephalosporins Mechanisms of action: • Penicillins and cephalosporins act through the inhibition of the terminal cross- linking of the peptidoglycan. Resistance to penicillin: • The organism produce penicillin destroying enzyme ß- lactamases • Absence of penicillin receptors. 3 2/28/2016 Cell Wall Inhibitors I. β Lactam antibiotics - Monobactam • Aztreonam (Azactam): - Resistant Gram-negative bacteria. - Pseudomonas. I. β Lactam antibiotics - Carbapenem • Imipenem (Tinam) - Resistant Gram-negative & Gram-positive bacteria. - Pseudomonas. I. β Lactam antibiotics - Cephalosporin 1st G +ve> -ve 2nd G +ve = -ve 3rd G -ve > +ve 4th G +ve = -ve Pseudomonas X Pseudomonas √ Cephalexin Cephdroxil Cefotaxime Ceftriaxone 2/28/2016 5:08:39 PM Cefuroxime Cefaclor Cefipime Dr. Medhat A. Eldaker 4 2/28/2016 Cell Wall Inhibitors II. Glycopeptides • Vancomycin - Resistant Gram-positive bacteria. - MRSA. III. Polypeptides A. Cycloserine - TB B. Bacitracin - Diagnostic - Topical 9 Protein Synthesis Inhibitors 30 S 50 S Aminoglycoside Tetracyclin Macrolide Chloramphenicol Bactericidal Bacteristatic Bactericidal Both Gm –ve & Pseudomonas vibrio Gm +ve> -ve Enteric fever Gentamicin Amikacin Tobramycin Oxytetracyclin Doxycyclin Erythromycin Chloramphenicol Azythromycin Clindamycin 2/28/2016 5:08:39 PM Dr. Medhat A. Eldaker 5 2/28/2016 DNA Replication Inhibitors I. Sulphonamides • • Bactiristatic UTI-Chemoprophylaxis - e.g Trimethoprim. Inhibition of precursor II. Quinolones • Bactricidal • Broad spectrum - Ofloxacin -Levofloxacin Inhibition of DNA gyrase - Ciprofloxacin -Nitrofurantoin (UTI) III. Rifampicin • • Bactricidal TB 11 Inhibition of RNA polymerase Cytoplasmic membrane Inhibitors Polyenes • Bacteiristatic - Polymyxin B topical - Mitronidazole anaerobes 6 2/28/2016 Causes of failure of antimicrobial chemotherapy: • Clinical condition not suitable to antibiotic treatment (as viral infection or mixed bacterial infection). • Failure to use laboratory properly. • Wrong choice of antibiotics. • Inadequate doses of the antibiotics. • Inadequate duration of treatment by the antibiotics. • Wrong route of administration. • Use of antagonistic antibiotic combination. • Development of antimicrobial resistance. Drug resistance • It is the unresponsiveness of the organisms to the given drug (antibiotics). 7 2/28/2016 Mechanisms of Drug resistance: Microorganisms produce enzymes that destroy the drug: as β- lactamases enzymes produced by Staphylococci to destroy the β-lactams. Microorganisms decrease their permeability to the drug. Microorganisms develop an altered structural target for the drug: As alteration of the receptor protein that give attachment to the drug. Microorganisms develop an altered metabolic pathway that bypasses the reactions inhibited by the drug. Microorganisms develop an altered enzyme that can still perform its metabolic function but is much less affected by the drug. Origin of drug resistance: The origin of drug resistance may be: • Non- genetic: in this case microorganism may loss the specific target structure for the drug for several generations. Genetic origin: • Chromosomal resistance: this results after spontaneous mutation in a locus that controls susceptibility to antimicrobial drug (change receptors, permeability). • Extra chromosomal resistance (plasmids): • Plasmids genes for antimicrobial resistance often control the formation of enzymes capable of destroying the drug. 8 2/28/2016 Microbial Genetics 9 2/28/2016 Microbial Genetics • Gene (the unit of heredity): a segment of DNA that carries in its nucleotide sequence information for a specific property. • Genotype: is the genetic make-up of a cell which reflects the actual sequence of nucleotides in the chromosome. • Phenotype: is a set of observable characteristics of an organism (structural and physiologic). • Chromosome: the chromosome consists mainly of a polymer called deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). This polymer is built up of subunits called nucleotides. The sequence of nucleotides in chromosomal DNA encodes all the information needed to specify the structure and behavior of a given bacterium. • Plasmid: is an extra-chromosomal piece of DNA usually much smaller than the chromosome and can replicate independently. 10 2/28/2016 Nucleic Acids Structure • A nucleic acid is a long chain of repeated subunits of nucleotides linked together by 3‘- 5‘phosphor-diester bonds. • Each nucleotide has 3 parts: (1) Sugar: • Deoxyribose: nucleotides containing the deoxyribose are deoxyribo nucleotides which form deoxyribo nucleic acid (DNA). • Ribose: nucleotides containing the sugar ribose are ribonucleotides which form ribonucleic acid (RNA). (2) Nitrogen bases: • Purines: adenine (A) and guanine (G). • Pyrimidines: cytosine (C) and thymine (T) /or uracil (U) in RNA. (3) Phosphate group: • Is linked to the 5‘ position of the sugar. • The removal of a phosphate group from the nucleotide give a nucleoside. 11 2/28/2016 DNA STRUCTURE 12 2/28/2016 DNA Replication • DNA replication is the process of producing two identical rep • This biological process occurs in all living organisms and is the basis for biological inheritance. • Each strand of the original DNA molecule serves as a template for the production of the complementary strand, a process referred to as semiconservative replication. Cellular proofreading and error-checking mechanisms ensure near perfect fidelity for DNA replication. • Important enzymes: DNA polymerase and Topoisomerase 13 2/28/2016 Gene Expression • The genetic information in DNA is expressed by copying DNA into RNA and the RNA is translated into a protein. Genetic information flows from DNA to mRNA to proteins. • 1) Transcription: RNA synthesis • Transcription is the process of synthesis of RNA (transcript) from a DNA template. • The RNA carries the gene's massage specifying the protein and so called messenger RNA (mRNA). • Carried out via RNA polymerase 14 2/28/2016 2) Translation (protein synthesis) • Translation is the synthesis of a polypeptide on mRNA. It takes place on the ribosomes. • A protein consists of one or more polypeptides; a polypeptide is a chain of amino acids covalently linked by peptide bonds. • Requires the interaction of mRNA, tRNA and rRNA. 15 2/28/2016 16 2/28/2016 Mutation Definition: • A mutation is a stable, heritable change in the sequence of nucleotides in the DNA. • Transcription of altered DNA produces altered RNA and altered mRNA gives a different polypeptide with different biological function and result in the appearance of altered phenotype. Classification of mutation A) Genotypic Classification 1. Point mutation (micro lesion): • Changes in a single nucleotide base pair by substitution, addition or deletion (frame shift ) • Substitution of purine called Transition. • Substitution of purine purine or pyrimidine by pyrimidine is pyrimidines is called transversion. 2. Multisite Mutation ( macro lesion ): • Change of multiple nucleotide it includes :• • • • Deletion: Missing of nucleotides Insertion: addition of novel base pairs. Rearrangements: all the base pairs are present but the order changes. Frame shift: may be point (addition or deletion of one bp) also multisite (addition or deletion of more than one base pairs). 17 2/28/2016 B)Phenotypic classification : 1) Same sense mutation: • Means the change of one base by mutation in amino acid codon result in another codon for the same amino acid for example leucine. UUA UUG Leucine Mutation leucine 2. Missense mutation: • Means the change in amino acid codon result in codon of another amino acid For example : TTG GTG Tryptophan Glycine • The effect of missense depends on the location of the changed amino acid in the polypeptide chain. 3) Nonsense mutation: • Means that base pair substitution that change a codon into one of the 3 chain termination codons ( UAG , UAA, UGA) • The effect of nonsense mutation depends on where the chain is terminated i.e. the truncated protein may have no activity, some activity or full activity. 18 2/28/2016 C) According to inducibility 1- Spontaneous mutation: occurs spontaneously due to error in reading by the polymerase enzymes. 2- Induced Mutations: mutation by damaging DNA by physical and chemical agents (mutagens). • a- Physical mutagens: • Ultraviolet rays. pyrimidine dimers T-Tcovalent linking of two adjacent pyramidine on the same strand) like T-T (68%) C-T (13%), T-C (19%) and C-C (3%). • Ionizing radiation. Causes DNA strand break either single or double strands • b- Chemical mutagenesis: • Chemicals that mimic normal DNA bases ( Base analogs ) These analogs are structurally related to bases but differ in pairing manner • Chemical that react with DNA bases ( base modifiers ) These chemical react directly with the nucleotide bases , alter the chemical structure • Alkylating agents: adding methyl or ethyl group to the oxygen of bases e.g : Nitrosoguanidine (NTG) • Chemicals that bind DNA bases (Intercalators). Acridine dyes and Acridine–like derivatives (proflavin, ethidium bromide) have the same dimensions as the normal bases so can slide between two adjacent base pairs (intercalating) causing frame shift 19 2/28/2016 20 2/28/2016 Effects of Mutation:• Have no effect on the expression of a gene means silent mutation. • Changes the level of gene expression (increase or decrease). • Produce a related but structurally different protein. • Mutation may proceed to carcinogenesis. • Deletion mutation of the virulence gene in bacteria can be used as a reference strain for vaccine (low virulent or avirulent strain). Gene Transfer New DNA may enter a bacterium naturally through transformation, conjugation or transduction. 1. Transformation: • It is the transfer of pure or naked DNA from one cell to another. • In transformation, the donor cell becomes lysed first, and one strand of this donor DNA is taken up into the recipient cell from its environment. • The donor DNA may genetically transform the recipient cell by recombining with a region of the chromosome. 21 2/28/2016 2. Conjugation: • Conjugation occurs mainly in Gram negative bacteria. • It is the matting of two bacterial cells during which DNA is transferred from the donor (male) to the recipient cell (female). • The mating process is controlled by F plasmid. • The mating process is mediated by the sex pilus. 3. Transduction: • The transfer of DNA (chromosomal or plasmid) from one bacterial cell to another by means of a bacterial virus (bacteriophage). • May be general or specific. Conjugation 22 2/28/2016 Bacterial Plasmids • In addition to the chromosome, many bacteria contain one or more plasmids. • A plasmid is an extra chromosomal piece of DNA usually much smaller than the chromosome and which can replicate independently (autonomous replication). • Plasmids are widely used in recombinant DNA technology. 23 2/28/2016 Classification of plasmids: According to: Size of plasmid: • Small: 1-10 kb. • Large: > 50 kb. • Mega: > 400 kb. Copy number: • Few copy number plasmids: have a copy number of 1 or 2 per bacterial cell. • Multicopy plasmids: have a copy number of 10-30 per bacterial cell. Shape: • Circular: most plasmids are circular. • Linear. Genetic content and function of plasmids: a)Drug- resistance (R) plasmids: • Carry antibiotic resistance genes which encode enzymes that inactivate particular antibiotics making the bacterial cell resistant to the relevant antibiotic. • R-plasmids carry antibiotic resistance genes for many antibiotics like β- lactams, aminoglycosides and tetracyclins. b)Virulence (Vi) Plasmids: • Carry genes which encode for virulence factors involved in the pathogenic characters of bacteria e.g. toxin production. 24 2/28/2016 C)Plasmids encoding for other functions: • Resistance to heavy metal ions e.g. mercury. • Resistance to intercalating agents as acridines. • Protection against radiation damage by UV. • Resistance to certain bacteriophages. Molecular Diagnosis of Microorganisms 1)PCR 2)Probe 25 2/28/2016 Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) • PCR is a technique for making millions of copies of a specific target sequence of nucleotides in DNA. Requirments: • The sample dsDNA • The primers: small pieces of ssDNA each about 20-30 nucleotides in length. • Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates of all four types • DNA polymerase (Taq polymerase). Steps of PCR: • The above mentioned reaction mixture undergoes a series of changes in temperature in a thermocycler device. This cycle is repeated about 20-35 times. Each cycle includes: • Denaturation step: initial heating to about 94ºC denatures the dsDNA fragment to two single strands. 26 2/28/2016 • Annealing step: transient cooling to 45- 60ºC allow the primers to bind (anneal) to their complementary sites on the sample DNA. • Extension step: a change to 72ºC then permits the DNA polymerase enzyme to start DNA amplification from the 3‘ end of each primer. When the temperature cycle is repeated, the newly synthesized strands act as templates and so on. 27 2/28/2016 Uses of PCR: • Diagnosis of microbial diseases: by detecting specific sequences of their DNA. This is especially useful for those pathogens that: • Cannot be cultured or cultured with difficulty e.g. HBV, HCV and HIV. • Those that grow very slowly e.g. M. tuberculosis. • Detection of genes coding for virulence factors e.g. detection of toxigenic strains of bacteria. • Determination of antibiotic resistance. • In forensic medicine. 28 2/28/2016 Probe Def: A piece of single stranded DNA or RNA (or PNA) (peptide nucleic acid) which is complementary to the sequence of interest (to be detected) and labeled by detectable material at its 5’ phosphate end. Principle: • Because of the specificity of base pairing the sequence of interest (DNA, RNA unknown in the sample to be diagnosed) can be detected by the binding (base – pairing) of the probe label. • The binding is specific if wanted DNA is present which is complementary to the probe. • If not present the probe and its label will not bound and washed out Types of label of the probes • Radioactive isotopes p32 detected by Autoradiography. • Fluorescence Rhodamine detected by UV radiation. Importance and Uses:- Nearly the same uses of PCR 29 2/28/2016 Thank you 30