* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download inhibition of bacterial growth with antibiotics professor tj foster
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
INHIBITION OF BACTERIAL GROWTH WITH ANTIBIOTICS PROFESSOR T.J. FOSTER MICROBIOLOGY LECTURE 3 PENICILLIN is secreted by fungal moulds of the Genus Penicillium Penicillium Fleming’s observation Modern antibiotic-impregnated discs Lawn of confluent Antibiotic diffuses bacterial growth from disc into agar. Clear zone due to inhibition of growth. Penicillin Production Scale-up Many different antibiotics are produced by Streptomyces species isolated from soil. Competition for resources Different indicator bacteria Lawn of indicator bacteria Streptomyces Mic142d3.jpg 204 KB Streptomyces: scanning EM Young vegetative hyphae Transition stage Aerial hyphae, young spores Mature spores Streptomyces in the soil Molecular Basis of Selective Toxicity Target is absent in mammal or is sufficiently different to be inhibited specifically PROKAYOTE-EUKARYOTE DIFFERENCES “MAGIC BULLET” Cell Wall (peptidoglycan) Polypeptide Folic acid Biosynthesis Ribosome. translation DNA replication mRNA RNA polymerase transcription ANTIBIOTICS ARE EITHER BACTERICIDAL OR BACTERISTATIC Growth of bacteria in liquid medium Exponential Stationary 109 Cells / ml 108 Tetracycline Bacteristatic 107 Log scale Add antibiotic Time Penicillin Bactericidal BACTERIAL GROWTH CURVE Arithmetic no plotted on a logarithmic scale 9 109 STATIONARY 8 108 Log10 no of cells/ 7 7 10 ml 6 DECLINE EXPONENTIAL LAG 2 4 6 8 16 Time (hours) (Reminder of topic covered in Lecture 1) SPECTRUM OF ACTIVITY • NARROW SPECTRUM – Gram positive only (eg penicillin) • BROAD SPECTRUM – Both Gram positive & Gram negative (eg tetracycline) BROAD SPECTRUM PENICILLINS • AMPICILLIN • CHEMICAL MODIFICATION OF PENICILLIN – NARROW SPECTRUM ----> BROAD SPECTRUM – EASY PENETRATION OF OUTER MEMBRANE OF GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIA CH3 R- CH2 – CO -NH CH3 NH2 Ampicillin O N COOH GRAM NEGATIVE BACTERIAL CELL WALL Lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) Outer membrane Fimbria (pilus) Pore Outer membrane protein Peptidoglycan Periplasm Cytoplasmic membrane Cytoplasm Gram Negative Bacterial Wall Structure Porin Polysaccharide chain Lipopolysaccharide LPS, endotoxin Outer Membrane Thin peptidoglycan Periplasmic space Cytoplasmic membrane Penicillin is a highly effective antibiotic because it inhibits the biosynthesis of cell wall peptidoglycan. Disaccharide repeat: N-acetyl glucosamine – N acetyl muramic acid G G M G G M M G G M M Cross bridge Stem peptide 4 amino acids Amino acid G M M G M MECHANISM OF ACTION OF PENICILLIN. INHIBITION OF FINAL STAGE OF CROSS-LINKING G G M G Nascent peptide bridge G M M G G M M G M M G M D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala = D isomer of alanine 5 amino acid stem G G M G Transpeptidation (Enzyme inhibited by penicillin) G M M G G M M G M M G M G G M G Cross bridge formed Loss of 5th Amino acid G M M G G M M G M M G M Penicillin is a highly effective antibiotic because it inhibits the biosynthesis of cell wall peptidoglycan Disaccharide repeat: N-acetyl glucosamine – N acetyl muramic acid G G M G G M M G G M M Cross bridge Stem peptide 4 amino acids Amino acid G M M G M RESISTANCE TO ANTIBIOTICSPENICILLIN Destruction of the antibiotic by a bacterial enzyme. NH O CH3 CH3 N β-LACTAM RING +H20 NH CH3 CH3 HN COOH COOH O OH Hydrolysis of β-lactam bond PENICILLOIC ACID β-LACTAMASE Inactive ANTIBIOTICS THAT INHIBIT PROTEIN BIOSYNTHESIS. TRANSLATION In prokaryotes the ribosomes are smaller than eukaryotes and have sufficient differences in structure that antibiotics can exhibit selective toxicity TETRACYCLINE • INHIBITS TRANSLATION OF mRNA INTO PROTEIN • BINDS SMALL (30S) RIBOSOMAL SUBUNIT AT A SITE • PREVENTS AMINO-ACYL TRANSFER RNA FROM BINDING • REVERSIBLE, BACTERISTATIC Large subunit RIBOSOME Small subunit Amino acyl tRNA Translation Elongation Cycle Translocation Peptide bond formation Tetracycline binds Small subunit. Blocks AA-tRNA binding Translation Elongation Cycle TETRACYCLINE X Prevents AA-tRNA binding Tetracycline Binds 30S subunit Blocks A site Ribosome stalled. Reversible, bacteristatic Tetracycline binds small subunit. Blocks AA-tRNA binding Ribosome is a Target for Several Antibiotics Erythromycin blocks translocation Streptomycin distorts codon-anticodon recognition Chloramphenicol blocks peptide bond formation RESISTANCE TO TETRACYCLINE. DRUG-SPECIFIC EFFLUX PUMP Tetracycline Slow diffusion into cell Cytoplasmic membrane Cell wall Rapid and specific efflux Membrane efflux protein GENETIC BASIS OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE IN BACTERIA Mutation Reduce affinity of target for inhibitor eg. Ribosome S12 protein – streptomycin binding site Streptomycin resistant mutant. Amino acid change in S12 prevents streptomycin binding Streptomycin binds protein S12 in small subunit Distorts codon-anticodon recognition. Allows incorrect aminoacyl tRNA to bind. THE BACTERIAL CHROMOSOME • Growth by binary fission - chromosome replication. • Offspring genetically identical. • Mutation in any gene 1 x 10-7/cell division. • Great potential for diversity. • Adaptation by mutation. 5 colonies ie 5 mutants in 108 cells Agar containing streptomycin 0.1ml culture 109/ml incubate DRUG RESISTANCE (R) PLASMIDS Acquisition of extrachromosomal DNA • Plasmid • Transfer by conjugation (cell-cell transfer) • Specify resistance to one or more antibiotics plasmid Tetracycline efflux chromosome β-lactamase PLASMIDS • Autonomous replication. Not part of chromosome • Some large plasmids promote conjugation • Carry genes encoding pilus and DNA transfer • Some plasmids (R) carry several antibiotic resistance genes. • Multiple resistance transferred in a single event Conjugation. Transfer of F or R (resistance) Plasmid from Cell to Cell A single strand of plasmid DNA is peeled off the double-stranded parent plasmid. The parent is restored to double stranded. The SS molecule is converted to DS in the recipient. Both cells have a copy of the plasmid. Cells separate. Is the End of the Antibiotic Era Approaching? • Multiple resistance in some pathogens (M. tuberculosis, S. pneumoniae) and some hospital pathogens (MRSA). • Over-use /abuse of antibiotics leads to resistance – – – – Treatment of viral infections - consumer “demand” Over-the-counter antibiotics in developing countries Animal husbandry – growth promotion with low antibiotic concs Lack of control of antibiotic usage in hospitals • Pharmaceutical companies – Few new drugs in pipeline. Few novel drugs introduced in past 20 years – Low profits, increased legislation and regulation, limitations on usage – New technologies (genomics, targeted drug design) has failed to produce a drug in the clinic • • • • • • Penicillin was the first antibiotic to be used in treatment of bacterial infectious diseases. The classic experiment of Fleming in which a fungal mould Penicillium was shown to produce an inhibitor of bacterial growth is performed in the laboratory practicals that accompany this series of lectures. The major targets for antibiotic action are (i) cell wall peptidoglycan (ii) nucleic acid synthesis (iii) biosynthesis of folic acid and (iv) the ribosome (protein synthesis). Inhibitors each exhibit SELECTIVE TOXICITY which can be understood in terms of differences between prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells Penicillin is a narrow spectrum antibiotic which is only active against Gram positive bacteria. This is because it cannot penetrate the outer membrane of Gram negative bacteria. The mode of action of penicillin is to inhibit the biosynthesis of cell wall peptidoglycan resulting in a bactericidal effect. It inhibits the penultimate step in cell wall peptidoglycan biosynthesis: transpeptidation. Semi-synthetic derivatives of penicillin (eg ampicillin) have a broader spectrum of activity because they can penetrate the outer membrane of Gram negative bacteria (more hydrophilic, pass through outer membrane pores). In contrast, tetracycline is a bacteristatic, broad spectrum antibiotic. Its mode of action is to bind to the small subunit of the bacterial ribosome to inhibit translation of mRNA into protein. It is important that you revise the process of translation and understand fully the inhibitory effect of this drug. Note that different antibiotics target other steps in translation. Eg streptomycin binds to a protein S12 in the small subunit and distorts codon-anticodon recognition causing faulty proteins to be made (messenger misreading). Resistance has developed very rapidly to all antibiotics used in medical practice. Resistance to penicillin is mediated by an enzyme that destroys the drug. Tetracycline resistance is caused by a membranelocated pump that keeps the concentration of the drug in the cytoplasm below the inhibitory level. Both resistance determinants are specified by genes on extrachromosomal DNA elements called plasmids that can be transferred between bacterial cells by conjugation. Resistance can also be acquired by mutations that prevent the antibiotic from binding to its target (eg streptomycin resistance and ribosomal protein S12) • Unfortunately Campbell has nothing on penicillin action. It deals with protein synthesis (translation) in some detail. It also covers R plasmids and conjugation See: Totora 6th edn chapter 7 (Control) and chapter 20 (Antimicrobial drugs) • http://www.sumanasinc.com/scienceinfocus/sif_antibiotics.html