Antibiotics I: Antimetabolites

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sulphonamides
ljjepson
Flashcards by ljjepson, updated more than 1 year ago
ljjepson
Created by ljjepson about 10 years ago
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Question Answer
What did Ehrlich discover about altering structure of compounds? Related compounds may have curative action increase independent of toxicity
What are the two types of effect antibiotics can have? Bactericidal= kills bacteria bacteriostatic= stops growth
what are the 4 main sites of antibiotic action -metabolism (antimetabolites) -cell wall synthesis -protein synthesis -nucleic acid synthesis
what was the first sulphonamide antibacterial
what is prontosil structure
What are the functional groups of a sulphonamide -amino terminus (cannot be changed or modified) -benzene ring (more active than other aromatics) -sulphonamide terminus (can be modified- swap hydrogens for other groups)
what molecule are sulphonamides similar to? what is this similarity called? pAB (para-amino benzoic acid) isosterism
what is pAB used for folate synthesis
how do sulphonamides work incorporated instead of pAB, creates a false product, prevents folate synthesis
why does incorporation of a sulphonamide prevent folate synthesis -next step after pAB is glutamate addition -glutamate can't be added to sulphonamide group
what is folic acid used for 'one-carbon metabolism'- transfer of methyl groups (e.g. dUMP-->dTMP)
why are sulphonamides selectively toxic to bacteria? Humans do not synthesise folate, sulphonamides block a pathway that is present in bacteria but not humans
what is the sulphonamide general structure
why do sulphonamides work so well? -they generate a false product- prevents a build up before the block (competition=overcome block) -bacteria have no uptake mechanisms for end-product -we don't synthesise folate- pAB not present in our cells
what blocks the action of sulphonamides end products of folate metabolism (serine, thymine etc)
what effect do sulphonamides have on bacteria usually bacteriostatic (become bacteriocidal in absence of thymine- 'thymineless death')
how is sulphonamide resistance achieved -inc pAB levels -inc folate uptake -reduced uptake of drug -metabolism of drug
what are sulphonamides used for UTIs, meningitis, and in veterinary medicine
what types of bacteria do sulphonamides affect broad spectrum- Gram -ve and +ve
what are 2 related drugs that act by the same mechanism -dapsone (used in combi therapy for leprosy) -p-amino salicyclic acid (tuberculosis)
what are some other drugs which target folate synthesis dihydrofolate reductase inhibitors (enzyme also present in humans so toxic): -methotrexate (anticancer) -trimethoprim - selective for bacterial enzyme (bacterial IC50=0.01µM, mammalian IC50=300µM)
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