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Resistance to antibiotics  Intrinsic resistance (examples) penG does not enter gram negative bacteria wellpenG does not enter gram negative bacteria well.

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Presentation on theme: "Resistance to antibiotics  Intrinsic resistance (examples) penG does not enter gram negative bacteria wellpenG does not enter gram negative bacteria well."— Presentation transcript:

1 Resistance to antibiotics  Intrinsic resistance (examples) penG does not enter gram negative bacteria wellpenG does not enter gram negative bacteria well why? doesn’t penetrate--ampicillin does why? doesn’t penetrate--ampicillin does rifampin doesn’t kill fungirifampin doesn’t kill fungi why? doesn’t get in---weaken barrier with amphotericin and then it does why? doesn’t get in---weaken barrier with amphotericin and then it does isoniazid does not kill bugs that don’t require synthesis of mycolic acidsisoniazid does not kill bugs that don’t require synthesis of mycolic acids  Environmental resistance e.g. sulfonamide resistance if high purines, methionine, thymidine available (such as in an abscess)e.g. sulfonamide resistance if high purines, methionine, thymidine available (such as in an abscess) e.g. aminoglycosides not effective in anaerobic environmente.g. aminoglycosides not effective in anaerobic environment  Acquired Resistance genetic changes, plasmids with new genesgenetic changes, plasmids with new genes

2 2006 Antibiogram Harborview/UW

3 Acquired Drug Resistance  1. enzymatic inactivation (  -lactams, aminoglyc. chloramph)

4 Bacteria keep up with big pharma in the  -lactam antibiotic arms race bacteria can often express more than one  -lactamase

5 Inactivation of aminoglycosides by acetylation, phosphorylation, and adenylation in drug- resistant organisms

6 Acquired Drug Resistance  1. enzymatic inactivation (  -lactams, aminoglyc. chloramph)  2. rapid efflux of drug out of cell (tetracyclines, ciprofloxacin)

7 Drug export systems in Gram +

8 Acquired Drug Resistance  1. enzymatic inactivation (  -lactams, aminoglyc. chloramph)  2. rapid efflux of drug out of cell (tetracyclines, ciprofloxacin)  3. decreased conversion to active form (isoniazid)  4. increased concentration of antagonist/competitor (sulfonamide resistance with increased PABA synthesis).  5. altered amount of receptor (trimethoprim-DHFR amplification)  6. altered structure of target to reduce binding (methicillin resistance, vancomycin resistance, ciprofloxacin res.)

9 Vancomycin resistance: mechanism

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11 Resistance can be transferred between bacteria  phage transduction  transposable elements  plasmid transfer during conjugation plasmids can contain multiple resistance genesplasmids can contain multiple resistance genes transfer can occur between non-pathogen and pathogenstransfer can occur between non-pathogen and pathogens

12 Plasmid-mediated drug resistance chloramphenicol aminoglycoside sulfonamide tetracycline

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14 Problems with Antibiotic resistance  more than 50% of antibiotics used in domestic animals for sub- therapeutic effect: breeding ground for resistance There are 7.5 billion chickens, 292 million turkeys, 109 million cattle and 92 million pigs in the United States.

15 Antibiotics given to pigs as of 2000

16  “KFC does not purchase poultry treated nontherapeutically with medically important antibiotics.” – Letter to “Keep Antibiotics Working,” August 28, 2002  McDonald’s ‘We’ve listened to the concerns, studied the issue, and the bottom line was we thought it was the right thing to do to discontinue the use of [fluoroquinolone antibiotics] in poultry,’ said Walt Riker, spokesman for Oak Brook-based McDonald’s. – Walt Riker, McDonald’s, “Chickens Fed With Antibiotics McGone,” Chicago Sun-Times, February 12, 2002 ‘We’ve listened to the concerns, studied the issue, and the bottom line was we thought it was the right thing to do to discontinue the use of [fluoroquinolone antibiotics] in poultry,’ said Walt Riker, spokesman for Oak Brook-based McDonald’s. – Walt Riker, McDonald’s, “Chickens Fed With Antibiotics McGone,” Chicago Sun-Times, February 12, 2002

17 Prospects for new antibiotics?  new antibiotic development slowed in 80’s/90’s  selective drugs have lower market value  5-15 yr time frame to get new drugs to physicians  recent increase in new antibiotic development is encouraging

18 active against Strep pneumoniae

19  First reported in a strain of K. pneumoniae  QnrA protein – 218 aa protein  Protects DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV from the inhibitory activity of quinolones--exact mechanism is not known yet  Qnr proteins QnrA2 – K. oxytoca (China) QnrA2 – K. oxytoca (China) QnrB - E. coli, K. pneumoniae, E. cloacae, C. koseri (USA and India) - 40% aa identity with QnrA QnrB - E. coli, K. pneumoniae, E. cloacae, C. koseri (USA and India) - 40% aa identity with QnrA QnrS – S. flexneri (Japan) - 59% aa identity with QnrA QnrS – S. flexneri (Japan) - 59% aa identity with QnrA  The presence of other mechanisms of resistance may increase plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance Plasmid Mediated Quinolone Resistance (PMQR)

20 PREVALENCE OF PLASMID-MEDIATED RESISTANCE TO QUINOLONES IN Escherichia coli  1% QnrA+ isolates among ciprofloxacin-resistant E.coli from different countries [AAC (2003) 47:559]  11% QnrA+ isolates among ciprofloxacin-resistant K. pneumoniae and 0% in E.coli from USA [AAC (2004) 48: 1295]  7.7% QnrA+ isolates among ciprofloxacin-resistant E. coli in Shanghai (China) [AAC (2003) 47: 2242]  0.4% QnrA+ isolates among nalidixic acid- resistant Escherichia coli (France) [AAC (2005) 49: 3091]

21 TB drug development  no new TB drugs in past 40 years  multi-drug resistant TB prevalent  Johnson & Johnson R207910 R207910 targets mycobacterium ATP synthetase targets mycobacterium ATP synthetase

22  -Lactam Antibiotic development  spectrum of action  resistance to  -lactamase  specific  -lactamase inhibitors

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24 Ampicillin Penicillin G Amoxicillin Methicillin Dicloxacillin R

25  -lactam antibiotics-1 resistantnarrow spectrumPenicillinase resistant -methicillin -dicloxacillin

26 Methicillin resistance  caused by unique peptidyl transferase that does not bind  -lactams  had been largely confined to hospital acquired infections  more recently--outbreaks in athletic teams, iv drug users, school children, gay community, general population  900 cases in LA county jails (2002) Structure of PBP2a

27 GroupSpectrum  -lactamase sensitivity Naturalpenicillins Pen G/PenV narrow spectrum grampositive sensitive Penicillinaseresistant methicillin dicloxacillin narrow spectrumresistant  -lactam antibiotics-1 Aminopenicillins ampicillin amoxicillin gramnegativesensitive Antipseudomonal ticarcillin piperacillin gramnegativeincluding pseudomonas sensitive

28 Cephalosporins Brody’s Human Pharmacology

29 GroupSpectrum  -lactamase sensitivity Cephalosporins cefaclor ceftriaxone broad spectrumvariable  -lactam antibiotics-2

30 Newer  -lactams  aztreonam (monobactam) gram - specific gram - specific resistant to  -lactamase resistant to  -lactamase  Carbapenems: imipenem, meropenem broad spectrum (gram +,gram - ) broad spectrum (gram +,gram - ) resistant to  -lactamase resistant to  -lactamase penetrates CSF penetrates CSF imipenem a substrate for dehydropeptidase I in kidney, meropenem is not imipenem a substrate for dehydropeptidase I in kidney, meropenem is not Brenner

31  -lactamase inhibitors

32  Clavulanic acid (suicide inhibitor for most lactamases) little antibiotic action on its ownlittle antibiotic action on its own combine with amoxicillin to get Augmentin (oral activity)combine with amoxicillin to get Augmentin (oral activity) combine with ticarcillin to get Timentincombine with ticarcillin to get Timentin  Sulbactam (similar inhibitor) combine with ampicillin to get Unasyn (given iv or im)combine with ampicillin to get Unasyn (given iv or im)

33 Activity of available  -lactamase inhibitors against clinically important  -lactamases


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