antibiotics; inhibitors of cell wall synthesis

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Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis LECTURE 22: Microbiology and Virology; 3 Credit hours Atta-ur-Rahman School of Applied Biosciences (ASAB) National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST)

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LECTURE 22:. Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis. Microbiology and Virology; 3 Credit hours Atta- ur - Rahman School of Applied Biosciences (ASAB) National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST). Antibiotics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis

Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis

LECTURE 22:

Microbiology and Virology; 3 Credit hours

Atta-ur-Rahman School of Applied Biosciences (ASAB)National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST)

Page 2: Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis

Antibiotics

• Antibiotics are agents that are "selectively" toxic for bacteria (either killing them [bactericidal] or inhibiting their growth [bacteriostatic]) without harm to the patient.

• Antibiotics work most efficiently in conjunction with an active immune system to kill infecting bacteria in the host.

• The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) refers to the lowest concentration of an antibiotic that stops visible growth.

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Components of Cell Wall

Page 4: Antibiotics; Inhibitors of Cell Wall Synthesis

Peptidoglycan

• Peptidoglycan consists of polysaccharide backbone consisting of N-acetyl muramic acid and N-acetyl glucosamine with peptide side chains containing D- and L- amino acids and in some instances diaminopimelic acid.

• The side chains are cross-linked by peptide bridges by Penicillin binding protein (PBP).

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Synthesis of Cell Wall• The precursor subunit (muramyl

pentapeptide attached to uridine diphosphate, UDP) is synthesized in the cytoplasm and passed to the cell membrane.

• The subunit is moved enzymatically to a lipid carrier (undecaprenol) and built into a completed subunit (disaccharide pentapeptide with attached bridge peptide).

• The completed subunits are then exported to the cell wall.

• After release of the monomer the undecaprenol is recirculated in the cell membrane and used again.

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Synthesis of Cell Wall• The glycan backbones of

the existing cell wall is enzymatically broken (by autolysins) to allow insertion of the newly synthesized subunit.

• Cross-linking of the peptide side-chain of the inserted subunit to the existing chain then occurs enzymatically (penicillin binding proteins).

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Synthesis of Lipopolysaccharide• Lipid A is assembled in the

cell membrane and the core sugars attached sequentially.

• O-antigen subunits are independently synthesized (on a lipid carrier as in peptidoglycan synthesis).

• The fully synthesized O-antigen is then attached to the lipid A-core (generating lipopolysaccharide) in the cell membrane before insertion into the outer membrane.

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Antibiotics; Mechanism

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1- Cycloserine; Inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis

• The terminal two amino acids of a peptide side chain of peptidoglycan are unusual amino acids (D-alanine as opposed to its isomer L-alanine).

• The antibiotic cycloserine is an analog of D-alanine and interferes with enzymatic conversion of L-alanine to D-alanine in the cytoplasm.

• Thus, subsequent synthesis of peptidoglycan cannot occur.

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Cycloserine; Antibiotic

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2- Vancomycin; Inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis

• Cross-linking of the peptide occurs in the cell wall.

• During this process D-alanine is enzymatically excised from the end of a pre-existing peptide side chain allowing it to be cross-linked (by a new peptide bond) to the recently synthesized peptidoglycan subunit.

• Vancomycin  binds to D-alanine-D-alanine thus sterically inhibits transpeptidation (cross-linking).

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Vancomycin

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3- β-Lactam; Inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis

• The beta lactam antibiotics include penicillins (e.g. ampicillin), cephalosporins and monobactams and carbapenems.

• They bind to and inhibit enzymes (penicillin binding proteins) involved in the transpeptidation (cross-linking) of peptidoglycan.

• These antibiotics have in common the four membered lactam ring.

• Attached to the lactam, penicillins have an additional five membered ring and cephalosporins a six membered ring.

• Monobactams consist of the lactam ring alone and display antibiotic activity.

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β-Lactam Antibiotics

Penicillin nucleusBenzyl penicillin

Monobactam nucleusAmpicillinAztreonm

Carbapenem nucleusImipenem

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4- Bacitracin; Inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis

• The peptidoglycan subunit is passed across the cytoplasmic membrane attached to undecaprenol diphosphate.

• After the nascent peptidoglycan monomer leaves the carrier on reaching the cell wall, the undecaprenol diphosphate is dephosphorylated to its monophosphate form.

• Bacitracin inhibits the dephosphorylation reaction and in the absence of monophosphorylated carrier peptidoglycan subunit synthesis stops.

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Bacitracin

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5- Polymyxin B ; Inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis

• It is derived from the bacterium Bacillus polymyxa.• Polymyxin B binds to the lipid A portion of

lipopolysaccharide and also to phospholipids. However, it binds preferentially to lipid A. This disrupts the outer membrane of Gram negative bacteria.

• Since the cell membrane is not exposed in Gram positive bacteria polymyxin has little activity against them.

• This drug is toxic to human cells, since it can also lyze eukaryotic membranes; this explains its limited clinical use.