Mechanisms of antimicrobial action directed against the bacterial cell wall and corresponding resistance mechanisms M-4 Advanced Therapeutics Course.

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Mechanisms of antimicrobial action directed against the

bacterial cell wall and corresponding resistance

mechanisms

Mechanisms of antimicrobial action directed against the

bacterial cell wall and corresponding resistance

mechanisms

M-4 Advanced Therapeutics Course

Mechanisms of antimicrobial resistanceMechanisms of antimicrobial resistance

Drug-modifying enzymes(e.g., - lactamases, aminoglycoside- modifying enzymes)

Altered drug targets (e.g., PBPs ribosomes, DNA gyrase)

Altered uptake oraccumulation of drug(e.g., altered porins, membrane efflux pumps)

Subunits for cell wall construction

D-ala-D-ala

pentapeptide

N-acetylmuramic acid N-acetylglucosamine

Cell Wall AssemblyCell Wall Assembly

Layer of cell wall with cross links of 5 glycines (gray)

Second layer of cell wall cross-linked to the lower layer

Transpeptidase (PBP) forms a 5-glycine bridge between peptides

A subunit is added to the growing chain

Transpeptidase, or PBP (orange sunburst)is bound by beta-lactam antibiotic (light blue) and its activity is inhibited (turns gray)

5-glycine crosslinking bridges cannot form in the presence of a beta-lactam, and the cell wall is deformed and weakened

Mechanisms of beta-lactam resistance

• Drug-modifying enzymes (beta-lactamases)–Gram-positives(e.g., S. aureus) excrete the enzyme

–Gram-negative (e.g., E. coli) retain the enzyme in the periplasm

• Overexpression of cell wall synthetic enzymes–e.g., vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA)

• Alteration of the PBPs so antibiotic cannot bind–e.g., S. pneumoniae, gonococcus

• Exclusion from the site of cell wall synthesis–Porin mutations in the outer membrane of Gram-

negative bacteria only (e.g., Ps. aeruginosa)

Beta-lactamases (dark orange) bind to the antibiotics (light blue) and cleave the beta-lactam ring.

The antibiotic is no longer able to inhibit the function of PBP (orange sunburst)

Beta-lactamases

Beta-lactamase activityBeta-lactamase activity

Altered drug targets

Vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus

vancomycin MIC = 2 µg/ml vancomycin MIC =8 µg/ml

MRSA VISA

Production of excessive cell wall; the antibiotic cannot keep up

MRSA VISA

Mechanism of vancomycin actionMechanism of vancomycin action

D-ala-D-ala

V

Mechanism of vancomycin resistanceMechanism of vancomycin resistance

V

D-ala-D-lactate

Vancomycin is unable to bind to the D-ala-D-lactate structure

·June 2002: isolated from the catheter exit site in a chronic dialysis patient·The patient had received multiple courses of abx since April 2001; toe amputation in April 2002 --> MRSA bacteremia·VRSA also found at amputation stump wound (with VRE and Klebsiella); not in the patient’s nose·Vancomycin MIC >128mcg/ml!! (contains vanA)·Sensitive to trim/sulfa, chloro, tetracyclines, Synercid, linezolid

MRSA and penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae

• These bacteria are both resistant because they have altered bacterial targets -- penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs or transpeptidases)

• In MRSA, the altered PBP2 (mecA) gene is acquired by gene transfer from another bacterium.

• In pneumococci, the alteration in PBP is generated by uptake of DNA released by dead oral streptococci and recombination at the pneumococcal pbp gene to create a new, chimeric protein that does not bind penicillin.–depicted on the next slide . . .

S. pneumoniae chromosomal pbp; penicillin-sensitive

alpha-strep pbp

alpha-strep pbp

Chimeric pbp (resistant to penicillin)

Alpha-strep

transformationS. pneumoniae

DNA

Outer membrane permeability in Gram-negative bacteria

Inner membrane

Outer membrane

Cell wall(peptidoglycan)

Cytoplasm

Beta-lactam (blue) enters through an outer membrane porin channel

Altered porin channel prevents access of the antibiotic to the cell wall

Bacterium

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