Study Guide: Protein Synthesis inhibiting antibiotics COPY Flashcards
What is the major class of bactericidal protein synthesis-inhibiting antibiotics, and how can one recognize names of drugs in each class?
Aminoglycosides (-mycin/-micin): gentamicin, tobramycin, amikacin
Name 6 classes (and 1 additional drug) that are examples of bacteriostatic protein synthesis inhibiting antibiotics.
Tetracyclines (-cycline) Macroclides (-thromycin/-xomycin) Lincosamides (-lin-) Streptogramins (-prisitin) Oxazolodonones (-zolid) Chloramphenicol
For each of the classes of bacteriostatic protein synthesis inhibitors (except glycylcyclines, which have only one member), list the portion of the name that is similar among the drugs in each class.
Tetracyclines (-cycline) : Doxycycline, Minocycline
Macroclides (-thromycin/-xomycin): Erythromycin, Clarithromycin, Azithromycin, Fidaxomycin
Lincosamides (-lin-): Clindamycin
Streptogramins (-prisitin): Dalfoprisitn/ Quinupristin
Oxazolodonones (-zolid): Linezolid, Tedizolid
Chloramphenicol
Name one aminoglycoside antibiotic that does not follow the aminoglycoside naming convention.
Amikacin
What are the two major subunits of the bacterial ribosome?
Large ribsomoal subuni and small ribosomal subunit
What are the 3 major steps in protein synthesis – what happens in each step?
Initiation: tRNA brings first amino acid in polypeptide chain to bind to start codon on mRNA
Elongation: tRNAs bring amino acids one by one to add to polypeptide
Termination: release factor recognizes stop codon, translational complex dissociates and completed polypeptide is released
Interferes with Initiation complex function (1 class):
Aminoglycosides (16S and 30S)
impairs Proofreading (1 class):
Aminoglycosides
interferes/ inhibits tRNA binding at the A site and / or peptide bond formation (6 classes
- Tetracyclines (16S on 30S)
- Glycylclines
- Oxazolidinones (23S on 50S)
- Chloramphenicol (23S on 50S)
- Lincosamides (23S on 50S)
- Streptogramins (23S on 50S)
block Exit of the polypeptide from the ribosome (2 classes)
Macrolides (23S on 50S)
Streptogrammins
For the bactericidal class of protein synthesis-inhibiting antibiotics, what 3 types of processes are thought to contribute to the bactericidal effect?
- Formation of free radicals, which damage the cell
- Formation of holes in the cell membrane
- Formation of toxic aggregates inside the cell
What 2 steps are required for aminoglycoside antibiotics to reach their target site in gram negative bacteria?
1) Passive diffusion across outer membrane
- Normal entry through porins OR can disrupt lipopolysaccharides (LPS) function to enable movement across outer membrane
2) Active transport across cell membrane into cytoplasm (O2 dependent)
- Anaerobes cannot bring aminoglycosides, requires energy gradient created by proton pump
- Low extracelleular pH and lack of O2 dissipate that gradient
How do each of the following impact cellular uptake of aminoglycosides in gram negative bacteria?
- LPS : disrupting LPS allows for movement across outer membrane
- Porins : polar drugs cannot cross membrane except through porins
- Oxygen : lack of oxygen dissipates gradient
- pH: low extracellular pH dissipates gradient
Are anaerobic bacteria susceptible to aminoglycoside antibiotics? Why or why not?
Anaerobic bacteria cannot bring aminoglycosides in because oxygen is required to drive the transport process, therefore they are not susceptible.
- Active transport across cell membrane is O2 dependent
What is the basis for gram positive bacteria’s intrinsic resistance to aminoglycosides?
1)Alteration or deletion of the target receptor protein on the 30S
2) Impaired drug uptake by:
- Mutation or deletion of a porin
- Mutation of struction involved in electrochemical gradient maintenance
- Growth conditions where O2 dependent transport process is not functional
3)Production of transferase enzymes that inactivate the aminoglycoside
Compare the process of cellular uptake between aminoglycoside and tetracycline antibiotics.
Aminoglycosides: combined with B lactam to create holes in peptidoglycan cell wall, allowing aminoglycoside to enter
Tetracycline: complexes with metal cations and attracts them to specific porins → accumulation in periplasm
-Uptake into cytopalsm is energy-dependent, driven by the pH gradient difference
Describe how bacteria alter (or protect) their antibiotic binding targets against aminoglycosides vs. tetracyclines
Aminoglycoside: antibiotics taget the small 30S subunit and bind at the 16S rRNA site causing:
- Interference with the initiation complex
- Production of faulty miscoded proteins, by interfering with proofreading
Tetracycline: bind reversibly to 16S site on small 30S subunit
Drug blocks the site