Antibiotics III – Flashcards

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Mechanisms of Resistance: Penicillin/Cephalosporins

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Detoxification by hydrolysis of  β-lactam ring by

  β-lactamase enzyme.   For β-lactamaseresistant   penicillins,altered PBPs that do not bind the penicllins.

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Mechanism of Resistance: Tetracycline 

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Interference with transport (efflux pump) 

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Mechanism of Resistance: Chloramphenicol

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Detoxification by acetylation of hydroxyl groups 

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Mechanism of Resistance: Aminoglycosides

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Enzymatic modification of drug; adenylation, phosphorylation, acetylation

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Mechanism of Resistance: Sulfonamides/Trimethoprim

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Drug resistant replacement enzyme

 (e.g. dihydrofolatereductase)

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Mechanism of Resistance: Erythromycin/Lincomycin

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Enzymatic modification (methylation) of 23S  ribosomal RNA

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Mechanisms of Resistance: (Fluoro)quinolones (FQs)

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1.Altered gyrase/topoisomerase
2.Efflux pump
 
Mutations in gene encoding for target enzymes reduce FQ binding and activity FQs can no longer interfere with DNA replication
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How Do Bacteria Become Resistant?

 

Mutation or Inheritance

 

 

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  • Chromosomal Mutations
  • For example, alteration of ribosomal protein to give streptomycin resistance
  • Can be one step, high level resistance or multistep low-level increases.
  • Generally, altered envelopes that prevent access into the cell or a change in target.
  • Probably impart some growth disadvantage
  • Single species, single parent

  • In nature, 
  • inheritance plays a large role
  • Multiresistant transfer
  • Inter-species transfer
  • Inter-genera transfer
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Elements of Antibiotic Resistance

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Plasmids

Insertion Sequences/Transposons

Integrons

Integron - genetic unit that includes genes of a site-specific recombination system capable of capturing and mobilizing genes contained in mobile elements called gene cassettes.

 

Genetic exchange: conjugation, transformation, transduction

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Ways to Control Antibiotic Resistance

 

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  • Control, reduce, and cycle antibiotic usage; reduce time course?
  •  Improve hygiene in hospitals and among hospital personnel andreduce movement of patients to reduce dissemination of resistantorganisms.  
  • WASH YOUR HANDS!!!  Be extra vigilant if you are a carrier of antibiotic resistant Staph or others
  • Generate new antibiotics
  • Modify existing antibiotics to produce agents inert to known bacterial resistance mechanisms
  • Maintain adequate drug levels/compliance
  • Elimination of  antimicrobial agents from animal feeds
  • Educate public and prescribers alike on prudent use- preserve
  • Do NOT give antibiotics for viral infections (colds, most ear infections)
  • Contain patients harboring resistant strains
  • Limit foreign bodies (catheters, prosthetics, etc)
  • Use appropriate prophylaxis (eg., surgery)

 

Proper diagnosis and treatment for an infection (misdiagnosis= wrong antibiotic)

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Multiple Drug Resistance

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  • A plasmid, transposon, or integron carries genes  for resistance to several different antibiotics
  • A single gene can encode a biochemical mechanism that results in resistance to a class of antibiotics  e.g. macrolides (erm), aminoglycosides (aac, aph, ant), ß-lactams (bla), or export (smr).
  • A single resistance gene determines resistance to structurally unrelated antibiotics (aad) or efflux systems.
  • Use of disinfectants selects for the genetically linked antibiotic resistance genes.
  • Mutations in multiple, independent targets
  •   (Mycobacterim tuberculosis)
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Side effects of Antimicrobial Therapy

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1.Hypersensitivity/Allergy (sulfa, penicillins)- Stevens

Johnson Syndrome- MUST ask patient if known allergy

2.Nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity- Aminoglycosides/Amphotericin B

 
3.Impair bone growth/tendon rupture- Quinolones/Tetracyclines-
 

(contraindicated for pregnant women and children- stains teeth)

 

4.Bone marrow suppression (aplastic anemia)

 Chloramphenicol- rarely used

 

5.Disruption of normal flora (may be responsible for many

common side effects- nausea, cramping, loose stools, etc)

  **Pseudomembranous colitis- killing of normal flora in gut

allows Clostridium difficle to overgrow

 

6.  Non-compliance leading to antimicrobial resistance

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