1 microbial control talaro chapter 12. 2 choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called...

74
1 Microbial Control alaro Chapter 12

Post on 15-Jan-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

1

Microbial ControlTalaro Chapter 12

Page 2: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

2

Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic….often called “germicides”

-gaseous, liquid or solid state-effective concentration (versus toxicity)-broad spectrum?-low toxicity-penetration of surfaces of inanimate objects or tissues-resistance to becoming inactivated by organic matter-noncorrosive or nonstaining properties-odor-affordability-availability

Page 3: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

3

Chemical Decontamination Procedures3 Levels

1) High - kill endospores… are sterilants – necessary for medical devices etc. e.g., catheters (some parts are not autoclavable)

2) Intermediate – Kills fungal spores but not endospores and generally kills most pathogens –used to disinfect items that touch mucus membranes but are not invasive

3) Low – Kills only vegetative cells of bacteria and fungi… probably kills most pathogens – for cleaning furniture, straps, electrodes… things that touch the skin surface

Page 4: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

4

Chemical Groups of Germicides

1) Halogens (a group of non-metallic elements– fluorine, bromine, chlorine, and iodine

Antimicrobial in the non-ionic state…Fluorine and bromine are dangerous so only Cl

and I are used routinelyBacteriocidal, bacteriostatic, and even sporicidal

with long contact timeCl and I are the active ingredients in over 1/3 of

all antimicrobials marketed

Page 5: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

5

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

Cl: used for almost 200 years

Cl2 gas, OCl- (hypochlorite) and NH2Cl (chloramine) – all react with water to form hypochlorous acid (HOCl) – reacts with certain amino acids and denatures proteins

Disadvantages- relatively unstable… light, alkaline pH, and organic matter affect stability

Page 6: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

6

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)I: Penetrates cells of microorganisms well

2-3% in water or 70% alcohol used a topical antiseptic for surgery5-10% for

Iodophores- I complexed to a polymer (e.g., polyvinylalcohol)… solves several problems…

-allows for slow release of I-increases penetration-less staining and irritating

e.g., Betadine

Page 7: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

7

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

2) Phenol derivatives (carbolic acid) – broad spectrum-derivatives referred to as phenolics- toxic to host cells – Lister (antiseptic surgery) – so not used much as antiseptics – disrupts cell walls, membranes and denatures enzymes

- all antimicrobials compared to phenol still (the phenol coefficient)-phenol used rarely but low percentages in soap solutions are commonly used (e.g., 1-3%, Lysol)- hexachlorophene - triclosan (Safeguard soap)

Page 8: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

8

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

3) Chlorhexidine – organic molecule with two phenol rings and Cl- targets cell membranes and dentures enzymes- bacteriocidal for Gram- and Gram+ organisms but is not sporicidal- low toxicity – used as obstetric antiseptic neonatal wash, wound antispetic, mucus membrane irrigant, preservative in eye solutions, and handscrubbing for doctors, preparing skin for surgical procedures

Page 9: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

9

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)4) Alcohols - -OH functional groups

- ethyl and isopropyl are the only suitable candidates- Concentrations of >50% dissolve lipids- Dentures proteins as well in cytoplasm- Optimal concentration is 70% (water is required for

proteins to coagulate)- Removes oils on skin in which bacteria may be embedded

- Disadvantages – evaporates quickly, some organisms can use it, some toxicity with isopropyl

Page 10: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

10

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

5) H2O2 and related compounds- bacteriocidal (broad spectrum) and even sporicidal at high concentrations- action is through the hydroxyl free radical (OH-)- 3% H2O2 (aqueous) is routinely used for skin and wound cleansing and mouthwashing- can be a sterilant at 35%... Can get into parts of medical devices without corrosion - can be vaporized- Ozone (O3) can also be used as a disinfectant and works similarly to preoxide

Page 11: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

11

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)6) Detergents and soaps

Detergents – have surface action (called surfactants) – are polar, charged molecules- most soaps fit here- cationic compounds work better than anionic ones… all have a long uncharged hydrocarbon chain (allows detergent to disrupt the cell membrane)- best example – quaternary ammonium compounds (quats) - benzalkonium chloride, cetylpyridinium chloride are commonly used- mixed with cleaning agents, used to disinfect floors, furniture, equipment surfaces… not good enough for medical devices (level of disinfection is low) - high concentrations – effective against some Gram+, viruses, fungi, and algae Low concentrations, mainly bacteriostatic

Page 12: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

12

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

Soaps: made up of fatty acids of oils with sodium or potassium (are salts of FA)

- Only weakly microbicidal and in fact, many bacteria including Pseudomonas aeruginosa can live and grow in soap dishes

- Removes oil on skin however and can be very effective at removing bacteria on skin if scrubbing accompanies the washing

- Thus many soaps add some other compound like I or chlorhexidine

Page 13: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

13

History of Chemotherapy• Folk Medicine (pre 1890’s)

– Plant products• Opium/morphine/heroin• Quinine Caffeine Cocaine• Salicin Digitoxin

• Diptheria antitoxin (1891)• Salvarsan for syphillus (1911)

– Arsenic compound– Paul Ehrlich– “magic bullets”

• Penicillium inhibited streptocci on petri plate (1928)– Alexander Flemming

• Protonsil Red (1935)– Streptococci– Gerhard Domagk– Sulphanomide

• Penicillin (1941)– Florey & Chain

• Streptomycin (1944)– Effective against

tuberculosis– Selman Waksman– Streptococcus griseus

Page 14: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

14

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)7) Heavy Metals – Hg, Ag, Au, Cu, Zn, As have all been used at one time

or another for microbial control- Most too toxic to host!!! And can be absorbed through skin so even tough to use as disinfectants…may cause allergic reactions- broad spectrum as they bind and inactivate proteins - Mercurochrome- AgNO3 Solutions and newborns – are still some Ag-containing ointments particularly for burns

Some other disadvantages – Microbes can develop resistance to metals (genes for this often times on the same plasmids as those that have R factors!)- Large amounts of organic material (host wastes etc.) neutarlize action- Age generally weak as to their antiseptic qualities

Page 15: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

15

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)8) The aldehydes – formaldehyde, and glutaraldehyde (have

–CHO functional group)- Intermediate to high level disinfectants

- “fixes” proteins- preserves tissues for many years…- Very toxic - Glut can be even used as a sterilant… killing spores in about 3 hours - “chemiclave” - vaporized glut- Formaldehyde gas – formalin (37% aqueous solution) – acts more slowly than glut - Formalin is a carcinogen

Page 16: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

16

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

9) Gaseous sterilants and disinfectants

a) Ethylene oxide-

b) Propylene oxide –

c) Chlorine dioxide -

Page 17: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

17

Chemical Groups of Germicides (cont.)

10) Dyes – even bacterial stains

- Crystal violet

-Malachite Green

11) Acids and Bases –

- Acetic acid –

12) Salt (NaCl) -

Page 18: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

18

Page 19: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

19

Remember:Antiseptic and DisinfectingActivity is:

1) Concentration (of compound)2) Time3) Organism Dependent!!!

Page 20: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

20

Page 21: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

21

Microorganisms & Antimicrobial Drugs• Antibiotics are common metabolic products of

aerobic bacteria & fungi

– Streptomyces (an Actinomycete) & Bacillus

– Penicillium & Cephalosporium (fungi)

• Inhibit other microbes in the same habitat, antibiotic producers have less competition for nutrients & space

Page 22: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

22

Mechanism of Antimicrobial Action• Antimicrobial drugs may simply inhibit bacterial growth BACTERIOSTATIC

• Drugs may also actively kill bacteria - BACTERIOCIDAL

• All exert action by inhibiting particular aspect of cellular physiology

• Five primary aspects of cellular physiology are targets• Cell Wall Synthesis• Protein Synthesis• DNA/RNA Synthesis• Maintenance of Plasma Membrane• Synthesis of Essential Metabolites

Page 23: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

23

Essential Metabolite

Selective Toxicity

Page 24: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

24

Inhibition of Cell Wall SynthesisPeptidoglycan

-lactam

Bulging surface of cocci

Weak points in peptidoglycan

Page 25: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

25BSCI 424 PATHOGENIC MICROBIOLOGY U of Maryland

Page 352

-lactams

Page 26: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

26

Peptidoglycan• Macromolecule composed of a

repeating framework of long chains cross-linked by short peptide fragments– Unique to Bacteria– Composed of 2 sugars: NAG &

NAM– Sugars alternate in the backbone– Rows linked by polypeptides

• Provides strong, flexible support to keep bacteria from bursting or collapsing because of changes in osmotic pressure

N-acetylglucosamine(NAG)

N-acetylmuramic acid(NAM)

Page 27: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

27

Page 28: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

28

Intact peptidoglycanNAM & NAG glycans cross linked by peptide bridges

-lactam antibiotics block peptidases that link the cross bridges between NAMs

PenicillinsCephalosporins

Relatively safe since mammals do not have peptidoglycan

Page 29: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

29

Some penicillins are less effective against Gram negative bacteria.Some cannot penetrate the outer membrane well.

Broad spectrum penicillins and cephalosporins can cross the cell walls of Gram negative bacteria.Carbenicillin & ceftriaxone

Page 30: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

30

Penicillins• All consist of 3 parts

– Thiazolidine ring– -lactam ring– Variable side chain dictates

microbial activity• R

Page 31: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

31

Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Page 32: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

32

Cephalosporins• Account for majority of all

antibiotics administered• Cephalosporium acremonium• -lactam• Relatively broad-spectrum• Resistant to most penicillinases

& cause fewer allergic reactions• Some are given orally, many

must be administered parenterally– Other than via the digestive tract

• Intravenous or intramuscular injection

Page 33: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

33

Vancomycin• Streptomyces orientalis

• Disrupt alanine-alanine bridges that link NAM in most Gram + bacteria– Bacteria lacking alanine-alanine bridges are

resistant

publications.nigms.nih.gov/.../chapter1.html

Page 34: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

34

Bacitracin• Peptide antibiotic

– In the product Neosporin

• Bacillus subtilis• Blocks movement of NAG and NAM from the

cytoplasm• Effective against Gram + • Topical antibiotic preparations

– Bacitracin has a high toxicity which precludes its systemic use

Page 35: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

35

• -lactams, vancomycin and bacitracin inhibit bacteria from building peptidoglycan

• Have no effect on already existing peptidoglycan

• Thus really most effective against actively growing cells

• Dormant cells or endospores are not susceptible

Page 36: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

36

Inhibitors of Specialized Cell Wall Synthesis• Unusual cell walls - Mycobacterium tuberculosis

• Isoniazid inhibits synthesis of mycolic acids… acid-fast stain…• Integral part of waxy cell wall• Essential for cell wall assembly

• Ethambutol inhibits incorporation of mycolic acid into waxy layer

• Both extremely effective against Mycobacterium

• Mycobacteria have generation times of 12 – 24 hours (slow growers)• Drugs administered over many months

Page 37: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

37es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imagen:Mycobacterial_cell_wall_diagram.png

Peptidoglycan

Plasma membrane

Cell wall skeleton

Outer lipids

Mycolic acid

Arabinogalactan L

ipoarabinomannan

Mycolic acids make up much of the cell wall of Mycobacterium

Page 38: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

38

Drugs that Block Protein Synthesis

• Ribosomes of eukaryotes differ in size and structure from prokaryotes

- 80s versus 70s – don’t forget subunit differences…– Antimicrobials selectively target bacterial

translation– Some of these drugs damage ribosomes in the

eukaryotic mitochondria or chloroplast• Contain a prokaryotic type of ribosome

Page 39: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

39

Page 40: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

40

• Aminoglycosides – Insert on sites on the 30S subunit and interfere with the reading of the

codons on the mRNA• Tetracyclines

– Block attachment of tRNA on the A acceptor site and stop further synthesis

• Chloramphenicol– Attach to the 50S subunit – Prevents formation of peptide bonds

• Macrolides & Lincosamides – Attach to the 50S subunit– Inhibit translocation

• Movement of ribosome from one codon to another

• Oxazolidinones – Inhibits initiation complex formation– Binds to the 50S subunit and prevents the 30S complex from forming the

70S complex

Most of These Effect Some Part of Translation

Page 41: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

41

Page 42: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

42

Antibiotics That Interfere With Protein Synthesis

Aminoglycosides – Gram- aerobic bacteria-Pseudomonas, Enterobacter, even Mycobacterium…

- not well absorbed through gut so usually administered intravenously and intramuscularly

Examples: Streptomycin, Neomycin, Gentamycin, Kanamycin

Page 43: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

43

Antibiotics That Interfere With Protein Synthesis

Tetracyclines: - Broad spectrum- First one was chlortetracycline (aureomycin) by Streptomyces aureofaciens… then Oxytetracycline by S. nimosus- Naturally-occurring versus synthetic

- Generally low toxicity… but Ca2+ problem… absorbed well though gut

- In 2005 tigecycline was developed… a new class of antibiotics called the glycylcyclines… first new tetracycline antibiotic in over 20 years… new ones are in clinical trials now

- Examples: Synthetic- Doxycycline, Minocycline

Page 44: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

44

Antibiotics That Interfere With Protein Synthesis

Macrolides - broad spectrum

- Used for upper resp. and soft tissue infections

- Used often as substitute for penicillin

- Toxicity low- absorbed well through gut

- Examples- erythromycin, azithromycin (Zithromax or Z-Pak)

Page 45: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

45

Antibiotics That Interfere With Protein Synthesis

Lincosamides – action like macrolides

- Lincomycin from S. lincolnensis- Used to treat Staph and Strept infections and also good

against some anaerobes, and protozoans such as Plasmodium (malaria)

- Other examples- Clindamycin (basically replaced Lincomycin)

- Clindamycin usually give intravenously

Page 46: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

46

Antibiotics That Interfere With Protein Synthesis

Oxazolidinones – Good against Gram+’s

- These were developed in the 90’s and used against MRSA when Vancomycin failed…

- First one developed was Linezolid (Zyvox)…

- Excellent oral bioavailability… and can be injected as well

- Other examples: AZD2563 (AstraZeneca)…shows great promise….

Page 47: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

47

Drugs that Disrupt Cell Membrane Function• A cell with a damaged membrane dies from disruption in

metabolism or lysis• These drugs have specificity for a particular microbial

group– Based on differences in types of lipids in their cell membranes.

• Polymyxins – Interact with phospholipids and cause leakage

– Originally the only class of antibiotic for Gram - bacteria

– Not effective against Gram + bacteria

– Topical use

• Toxic to kidney cells

Page 48: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

48

Page 49: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

49

• Pyrazinamide– May inhibit fatty acid synthesis– Transport across the cytoplasmic membrane is

disrupted– Uniquely effective against Mycobacterium

• Mycobacterium accumulates this drug

Page 50: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

50

Inhibition of an Essential Metabolite• Sulfonamides and trimethoprim interfere with folate

metabolism– Block enzymes required for tetrahydrofolate synthesis needed for DNA

& RNA synthesis

• Competitive inhibition by sulfonamides– Structural analog– Drug competes with normal substrate for enzyme’s active site

• para-aminobenzoic acid (PABA)• Trimethoprim inhibits dihydrofolate reductase

– Next step in the tetrahydrofolate acid biosynthetic pathway

• Synergistic effect– Both drugs administered together– An additive effect, achieved by multiple drugs working together,

requiring a lower dose of each

Page 51: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

51

Sulphonamides inhibit dihydropteroate synthetase since it is a structural analogue of the normal substrate, PABA.

Trimethoprim inhibits dihydrofolate reductase, the next step in the folic acid biosynthetic pathway.

Humans convert dietary folic acid to THFA

Page 52: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

52

Quinolones Inhibit DNA Unwinding Enzymes

• Inhibit Gyrase– Introduces supercoils

• Page 258

– Essential for DNA replication– Necessary for packaging chromosome such that it

fits inside the cell

• Broad spectrum against Gram + & Gram -– Nalidixic acid – Norfloxacin – Ciprofloxacin

Page 53: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

53

Rifampin Inhibits RNA Polymerase

• Rifamycin inhibits prokaryotic RNA polymerase• Extremely soluble

• Can penetrate many tissues other drugs cannot

• Tuberculosis

• Meningitis

Page 54: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

Antiviral Agents

• Inhibition of Viral Entry

• Inhibition of Nucleic Acid Synthesis

• Inhibition of Viral Assembly / Release

Page 55: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

55

Interferes with neuraminidase

Blocks entry

Prevents binding

Page 56: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

56

Inactivates DNA polymerase

Interferes with reverse transcriptase

Interferes with reverse transcriptase

Page 57: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

57

Page 58: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

58

Interferes with viral protease

Page 59: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

59

Interferons• Signaling molecules made by virally infected cells

• Human proteins

• Secreted from infected cell, signals other cells to make anti-viral proteins (AVP)

• AVP produced in susceptible cells prevent viral replication

• Does not help cells that are already infected

• Only assists uninfected cells in resisting infection

Page 60: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

60

Mechanisms Drug Resistance• Drug inactivation

– Penicillinases– Genes on R plasmids– 200 different lactamases described

-lactamase

cephalsporinase

Page 61: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

61

• Decreased permeability to drug or increased elimination of drug from cell– Alteration of shape or charge of porins

Page 62: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

62

Multidrug resistant pumps• Self defense ejection system

• Lack selectivity & can pump out antimicrobials, detergents and toxins

publications.nigms.nih.gov/.../pump_it_up/

Page 63: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

63

• Change in drug receptors– Drug cannot bind to target

Vancomycin resistance develops when one D-alanine is converted to D-lactate

Instead of 3 H bonds now only two form between vancomycin and D-lactate

Page 64: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

64

• Change in drug receptor– Streptomycin resistance– A missense mutation changes the binding site

on the 30S subunit of bacterial ribosome

Page 65: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

65

• Change in metabolic patterns• Produce slightly different enzyme• Abandon metabolic pathway• Create a new metabolic pathway

Sulfonamide & trimethoprim resistance

Page 66: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

66

Page 67: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

67

Preventing Drug Resistance• Complete the full antimicrobial prescription

– High concentrations of the drug must be maintained for a sufficient time to eliminate all sensitive cells

• Combinations– Synergistic– Some combinations are antagonistic

• Limit use– Estimated that 50% of the prescriptions for antibacterial drugs to treat

sore throats and 30% of prescriptions for ear infections are unnecessary

• Viral etiology• Drug Development

– Novel side chains to existing drugs– New drugs

Page 68: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

68

• Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC)– Smallest concentration of drug that visibly inhibits growth

• Therapeutic Index – The ratio of the dose of the drug that is toxic to humans as

compared to its minimum effective dose

Page 69: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

69

Disk Diffusion Method• Spread dilute culture of bacteria over plate

• Place disk containing known amount antibiotic on plate

• Antibiotic diffuses out of disk, creates concentration gradient

• If bacteria is susceptible, a zone of inhibition is produced

• The larger the zone, the more sensitive the organism

• A qualitative test

• Sensitive

• Intermediate• Resistant

Page 70: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

70

Larger the zone, the greater the sensitivity to the antibiotic

Qualitative test

Page 71: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

71

Larger the zone, the greater the sensitivity to the antibiotic (must be comparable so the same antibiotic)

Page 72: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

72

Quantitative Sensitivity Tests• E-test is more quantitative

• Spread dilute culture over plate

• Place plastic strip with gradient of antibiotic

• Zone of inhibition is produced

• Can determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of an antibiotic required for specific organism

Page 73: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

73

Broth Dilution Tests

• More versatile than E-test

• Allows determination of minimal bactericidal concentration (MBC) as well as MIC

• Make series of dilutions of antibiotic in growth media

• Inoculate each dilution with bacteria

• Determine minimum concentration required to inhibit growth

Page 74: 1 Microbial Control Talaro Chapter 12. 2 Choosing a disinfectant or antiseptic…. often called “germicides” -gaseous, liquid or solid state -effective

74

But Remember- must reach that concentration in blood or in specific tissue!!