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Download 11 Antibiotics
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ANTI-BACTERIAL Compounds Germicide / antiseptic on skin & disinfectant on things External use – most are oxidants: Cl2, O3, I2, NaOCl, H2O2, KMnO4, Chloramine-T CH3 Na SO2 N Cl Cl HO Phenol(s) COOMe O R Cl Chloramine-T OH OH Cl Triclosan Methyl salicylate Phenols: generally toxic through skin but <1.5 % is tolerable egs. Lysol (= p-cresol), TCP (= trichlorophenol), phenol (carbolic acid, R=H), Triclosan Listerine contains menthol, thymol, methyl salicylate and eucalyptol Quaternary Ammonium Compounds - Mouthwash - R4N+ X+ N (CH2)15CH3 CH3 + OCH2CH2N (CH2)11CH3 Br CH3 Br - Cetyl pyridinium bromide (Life, Safeway brands, etc.) Domiphen bromide NH Cetrimonium bromide is (CH3)3N+(CH2)15CH3 Br= cetrimide Cl NH NH NH NH (CH2)6 NH NH NH Chlorhexidine – for gingivitis NH NH Cl INTERNAL USE: Bacteria divided into Gram +ve and Gram -ve groups: Crystal violet stain turns both purple but only Gram +ve reamin so after I2 treatment and an acetone-alcohol-water wash Gram +ve have thick walls with no outer membrane and trap stain egs. Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Pneumonococcus Game –ve have thin walls with inner and outer membranes and do NOT retain the stain egs. Meningitis, Salmonella, E. Coli, Pseudomonas TB (tuberculosis, consumption) (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) destroys lung tissue, still kills ca. 1-2M / y WHO estimates 1/3 pop of earth carries TB bacterium TB vaccine essentially wiped out TB in the West but ca. 424K/y drug resistant cases (ca. 30K/y are VERY drug resistant) UVic case February 2009 rifampicin and isoniazid are most common treatment but procedure is long and many cut it short: as a result 1.2% of cases are resistant Serious concerns that TB could reappear in West: No new drugs for 40 years but ~ 30 now under study A new Johnson &Johnson drug (R207910) is under trials that inhibits ATP synthase Bayer is in trials with moxifloxacin Novartis is in trials with a nitroimidazole OH Br N R207910 O N THE SULFA DRUGS: effective against most Gram +ve, some Gram –ve N H2N N N N NH CONH OH CHCH2CH2COOH COOH H2N COOH FOLIC ACID PABA p-aminobenzoic acid We eat folic acid; bacteria make it from PABA: we can fool them using sulfanilamide so they die of vitamin deficiency H2N R= SO2NHR N a sulfanilamide SO2 NH N S Sulfapyridine Sulfadiazine Sulfathiazole N H2 N N N O sulfamethoxazole common in Canada PENICILLINS (Narrow spectrum antibiotics) History: Original mould: penicillin notatum (pencil shapes) discovered by Fleming while working on staph bacteria, left cover plate off and noticed bacteria did not grow near mould Flory (Oxford, 1940) found way to extract penicillin out of mould, tried it on London policeman with blood poisoning from shaving cut. Wartime: needed to make much more, (used bed pans in Oxford to grow mould) so in June 1941 took production to USA (15,000 gallon vessels) Mould now: penicillin chrysogenum found on a cantaloupe in Peoria, Illinois in 1943 gave better yields and is used to make Pen-G Penicillins: general formula includes the b-lactam ring RCONH S CH2 Pen Pen-G has R- = N O Pen-G COOH OH Pen CH3 OCH2-Pen Pen-V H2N Pen Ampicillin O N H2N Cl Pen Amoxicillin Cloxacillin You can make those other than Pen-G by feeding the mould the appropriate acid, RCOOH Pen-G has to be injected: 600-2400 mg/day IV in 3-4 doses Useful against most GRAM +ve plus pneumonia, meningitis, gonorrhea, gangrene, bone infections Others can be taken orally: Pen-V: 300mg per 8h, first oral one Amoxicillin: most common, 250-500 mg per 8h Ampicillin: best for urinary tract Cloxacillin: approved for some resistant bacteria Many people are allergic to Penicillins (especially G) – can lead to death! HOW PENICILLINS WORK: b-lactam ring binds to a transpeptidase enzyme responsible for forming the cross links in the peptidoglycan layer (bacterial cell walls): as the cell grows it needs to constantly break these layers: If it can’t expand, the cell bursts and dies BUT some bacteria have Penicillinase, an enzyme that cleaves the blactam ring and allows normal wall formation: resistant Five Penicillins are more resistant to Penicillinase: mainly reserved for Staph infections (egs. Nafcillin and Methicillin) Pen Pen OEt R= nafcillin MeO OMe methicillin CEPHALOSPORINS: from mould found in sewage (Sardinia 1950’s) R-CONH S N O Z COOH R= R= H2N Ceph + N Ceph internal -COO Z=Cl a cephalosporin Cefachlor (Ceclor) 250 mg/8h, 2g/day max H2N S N Z= Ceph N OCH3 Cefepime (Maxipime) 1 g/12h for 10 days Very popular (~2B$/y) more effective than penicillins against Gram -ve types CPS lists 16 in use all start with CefNot affected by penicillinase but a cephalosporinase has now emerged WIDE SPECTRUM ANTIBIOTICS: MYCINS and TETRACYCLINES Streptomycin (from soil) in 1947 – stops cell division, shuts down protein/RNA synthesis Too toxic for use, then last resort for TB Also from soil: the tetracyclines: OH O OH O OH CONH2 OH X OH Z N(CH3)2 tetra-cyclo = 4 rings (A,B,C,D) Chlorotetracycline (Aureomycin) X=Cl, Z=OH Tetracycline (Terramycin, Ambramycin,.....) X=H, Z=OH OH More common ones now: O OH O OH CONH2 OH X OH Z N(CH3)2 Doxycycline (Vibramycin) X=H, Z=OH, no OH in ring B Minocycline (Klinomycin) X=NMe2, Z=H, no OH or Me in ring B Demeclocycline (Declomycin) X=Cl, Z=H, no Me in ring B Doses: 250-600 mg/6h They inhibit protein synthesis by binding to the ribosome, Kill most bacteria = broad spectrum including intestinal bacteria, so side effect is DIARRHEA Eat pro-biotic yogurt when on this (and shortly after stopping)!! Was used against Legionnaire’s Disease (Chicago 1976) Ca salts, antacids bind to them: avoid milk and antacids Side effects: browning of teeth (acne treatment for teens) photosensitive skin reduced effectiveness of birth control pills Mostly excreted unchanged – high levels can be found in sewage! Aside on Legionnaire’s disease: hundreds staying at one hotel fell ill (34 died) during the 1976 American Legion Convention in Chicago - discovered that the pneumonia-like illness was caused by a previously unknown bacterium, now known as Legionella pneumophillia. Turns out the bacteria proliferates in warm, stagnant water, in this case in the hotel air conditioning system. Subsequent outbreaks have occurred in 1999 (Netherlands flower show, 34 died), 2001 (Spain, hospital cooling tower, 6 died) and 2002 (UK, Art Center cooling tower, 7 died) AMINOSUGARS (AMINOGLYCOSIDES) ERYTHROMYCIN CLINDAMYCIN (Dalacin) O O OH N Cl NH HO O HO O O O HO NMe 2 O OH OMe SMe OH OH Very widely used allergic reactions rare More toxic usually only for more serious infections cross placenta and go in to breast milk Dose: ~ 1 g/day in 2-4 doses; up to ~4 g/day in more serious cases VANCOMYCIN Last resort for many staph types: interferes with wall synthesis VRE = Vancomycin resistant enterococci (opportunistic gut infection) - in Canadian hospitals (see chart at right) NH2 O DAPTOMYCIN O O O NH O NH O HO O O NH NH O NH NH (CH2 )8 CH3 NH O HOOC HOOC O H2 N HN HN NH HOOC HOOC NH O O HN NH NH O NH2 O used against VRE and methicillin resistant staph (MRSA)* (stops synthesis of cell membranes) * ’flesh eating disease’ 30% mortality QUINOLONES - CIPRO Quinolones are synthetic, made first in 1987 They block bacterial DNA replication by stopping the re-coiling of new strands, make KNOTS instead CIPROFLOXACIN: most active broad spectrum antibiotic available (Anthrax scare) Sales ~ 2B$/y especially useful for lung infections, bones, urinary tract (oral or IV) NH N N N F HO2C O Related: Norfloxacin (Noroxin) Et in place of cyclopropyl Some newer ones: F N NOMe N O N N HOOC NH F HOOC HOOC N N CH 2NH 2.HO 3SMe N F O N F F O O Levofloxacin LEVAQUIN Trovafloxacin TROVAN Gemifloxacin wide use for TB Others: moxifloxacin; gatifloxacin; ofloxacin Trovan (2 x 200mg/day): In Canada about 360,000 pneumonia cases per year, still 7000 deaths Some strains of staph which are Vancomyin and Methicillin resistant are now resistant to Cipro Need to keep making newer classes: 2-Pyridones and Oxazolidinones O F H2N N COOH O N N F NHCOCH3 O O Linezolid (ZYVOXAM) Antagonize enzymes: Bind the bacterial ribosome, shuts down protein synthesis NEWEST APPROACH EFFLUX PUMP BLOCKERS Some resistant strains pump antibiotic out of the cell: these block that pump action MICROCIDE have found a peptide that stops pseudomonas effluxing fluoroquinolones = drug ca. 8x more effective 2005: FDA granted fast track status to intravenous iclaprim for the treatment of complicated skin and skin structure infections (cSSSI) – resistant staph ANTI-FUNGALS Tolnaftate, Tinactin, Pitrex Fungistop, Triactin topical only, inhibits steroid biosynthesis N-C-O S OMe O OMe O O MeO Cl Griseofulvin (Fulvicin, Grisovin, Grisactin) hair and nail infections orally for ‘ringworm’ made by mould penicillin griseofulvin: disrupts the microtubules Not if pregnant: Not with alcohol: teratogen tachycardia NYSTATIN (mycostatin) especially for yeast (candida) infections (mouth, throat, vagina, underarms....) Method of action: binds to ergosterol, the main component of the fungal cell membrane. If present in sufficient concentrations, it forms a pore in the membrane that leads to K+ leakage and death of the fungus. (mammals do not have ergosterol-based cell membranes) MONISTAT (miconazole) Vaginal yeast infections: inhibits biosynthesis of triglycerides (fats), phospholipids, steroids and damages the fungus cell wall Used topically as 2-3% cream N N CH2 CH OCH2 Cl Cl Cl Cl N F N OH F OH O N N OH N terbinafine (an allylamine) H2 NSO2 Cl N Chlorphensin O N N N Cl COOH NH Cl Fluconazole furosemide Clotrimazole N N O N N N N N O O N N O Cl N N Cl O Itraconazole N Cl N Cl Cl O O O Cl Cl Oxiconazole ketoconazole OTHER ANTIFUNGALS Terbinafine Ketoconazole Fluconazole Itraconazole Clotrimazole Oxiconazole Chlorphenesin N [LAMISIL] [NIZORAL] cream, shampoo, tablets [DIFLUCAN] capsules [SPORONOX] capsules, solution [CANESTAN VAGINAL & TOPICAL] cream or inserts [OXIZOLE] cream, lotion [MYCIL] cream Selenium sulfide is often used in shampoos, sold as VERSEL (lotion) Cl