1 / 29

C ontent

C ontent. Bacterial protein synthesis inhibitors Part 1 . Macrolides(大环内酯类), Lincomycin(林可霉素类), Part 2 . Aminoglycosides(氨基糖苷类) and Polymyxins(多黏菌素类) Part 3 . Tetracyclines(四环素类) and Chloramphenicol(氯霉素) Synthetic antimicrobial agents(人工合成抗菌药). Bacterial protein synthesis inhibitors.

deleons
Télécharger la présentation

C ontent

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Content Bacterial protein synthesis inhibitors Part 1. Macrolides(大环内酯类), Lincomycin(林可霉素类), Part 2. Aminoglycosides(氨基糖苷类) and Polymyxins(多黏菌素类) Part 3. Tetracyclines(四环素类) and Chloramphenicol(氯霉素) Synthetic antimicrobial agents(人工合成抗菌药)

  2. Bacterial protein synthesis inhibitors

  3. Part1-1Macrolides History 1952 Erythromycin(红霉素) 1970s Acetylspiramycin(乙酰螺旋霉素) Medecamycin(麦迪霉素) josamycin(交沙霉素) 1980s Clarithromycin (克拉霉素) Roxithromycin(罗红霉素) Azithromycin(阿奇霉素) Macrolides

  4. STRUCTURE: (克拉霉素) (红霉素) (阿奇霉素)

  5. 14碳环大环内酯类: 红霉素(erythromycin) 克拉霉素(clarithromycin) 罗红霉素(roxithromycin) 15碳环大环内酯类: 阿奇霉素 (azithromycin) 16碳环大环内酯类: 吉他霉素(kitasamycin) 交沙霉素(josamycin) 乙酰螺旋霉素 (acetylspiramycin) 麦迪霉素(medecamycin)

  6. Erythromycin (红霉素) Antimicrobial activity Gram-positive organisms: pneumococci(肺炎双球菌), streptococci(链球菌), staphylococci(葡萄球菌) , diphtheriae(白喉)etc Gram-negative organisms:legionella(军团菌),bacillus pertussis(百日咳), brucella(布氏) , meningococci(脑膜炎球菌), diplococcus gonorrhoeae (淋病双球菌) etc Others: mycoplasma(支原体), chlamydia trachomatis(沙眼衣原体), rickettsia(立克次体), spirochete (螺旋体), anaerobes(厌氧菌) etc. Macrolides

  7. Typical therapeutic applications of macrolides.

  8. Target 50s ribosomal RNA Mechanism Inhibition of translocation of mRNA Macrolides Mechanism of action C: Chloramphenicol M: Macrolides T: Tertracyclines

  9. Pharmokinetics Not stable at acid pH Metabolized in liver Excreted in bile Drugs: erythromycin stearate(硬脂酸红霉素) erythromycin ethylsuccinate(琥乙红霉素,利君沙) erythromycin estolate(无味红霉素) Macrolides

  10. Mechanism of resistance Modification of the ribosomal binding site Production of esterase that hydrolyze macrolides Active efflux system Macrolides

  11. Adverse reactions Gastrointestinal effects Liver toxicity Superinfection(二重感染) Macrolides

  12. Second generation Advantage : Broaderspectrum, higheractivity Orallyeffective High blood concentration Longer t 1/2 Less toxicity Mainly used in respitory tract infection Macrolides

  13. Azithromycin (阿齐霉素) Has the strongest activity against mycoplasma pneumoniae(肺炎支原体) More effective on Gram-negative bacteria Well tolerated T1/2 :35~48h once daily Mainly used in respiratory tract infection Macrolides

  14. Clarithromycin(甲红霉素,克拉霉素) Has the strongest activity on Gram-positive bacteria, legionella pneumophila(肺炎衣原体), chlamydia pneumoniae (嗜肺军团菌)and H.p Good pharmacokinetic property Low toxicity Macrolides

  15. Third generation Ketolides(酮基大环内酯类) Ketolides are semisynthetic 14-membered-ring macrolides, differing from erythromycin by substitution of a 3-keto group for the neutral sugar L-cladinose. Telithromycin (泰利霉素) It is active in vitro against Streptococcus pyogenes, S pneumoniae, S aureus, H influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, mycoplasmas, Legionella, Chlamydia, H pylori, N gonorrhoeae, B fragilis, T gondii, and nontuberculosis mycobacteria. Many macrolide-resistant strains (macrolides-lincomycins-streptogramins, MLS)are susceptible to ketolides because the structural modification of these compounds renders them poor substrates for efflux pump-mediated resistance and they bind to ribosomes of some bacterial species with higher affinity than macrolides. Macrolides

  16. Some properties of the macrolideantibiotics.

  17. Part 1-2 Lincomycin (林可霉素)and Clindamycin(克林霉素) Lincomycin & Clindamycin ① Chloramphenicol ② ClindamycinMacrolides ③ Tertracyclines • Mechanism • Binding to 50s ribosome subunit and inhibiting protein synthesis

  18. Antimicrobial activity Gram-positive organisms Bacteroide fragilis and other anaerobes Pharmacokinetics Absorbed well Penetrate well into most tissues including bone Lincomycin & Clindamycin

  19. Clinical uses Severe anaerobic infection Acute or chronical suppurative osteomylitis(化脓性骨髓炎), arthritis caused by susceptive organisms especially Staphylococci aureus(金黄色葡萄球菌) Adverse reactions Gastrointestinal effects: severe diarrhea and pseudomembranous enterocolitis caused by Clostridium difficile(难辨梭状芽孢杆菌): vancomycin & metronidazole(甲硝唑) Impaired liver function , neutropenia(中性粒细胞减少) Lincomycin & Clindamycin

  20. Part 1-3Oxazolidinones(恶唑烷酮类)--- Linezolid (利奈唑胺) Linezolid is a member of the oxazolidinones, a new class of synthetic antimicrobials. Mechanism of action Linezolid inhibits protein synthesis by preventing formation of the ribosome complex that initiates protein synthesis. Its unique binding site, located on 23S ribosomal RNA of the 50S subunit, results in no cross-resistance with other drug classes. Mechanism of Resistance Resistance is caused by mutation of the linezolid binding site on 23S ribosomal RNA. Linezolid

  21. Linezolid • Antimicrobial spectrum: • It is active against gram-positive organisms including staphylococci, streptococci, enterococci, gram-positive anaerobic cocci, and gram-positive rods such as corynebacteria and Listeria monocytogenes. • It is primarily a bacteriostatic agent except for streptococci for which it is bactericidal. • There is modest in vitro activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

  22. Adverse reaction The principal toxicity of linezolid is hematologic—reversible and generally mild. Thrombocytopenia(血小板减少症) is the most common manifestation (seen in approximately 3% of treatment courses), particularly when the drug is administered for longer than 2 weeks. Neutropenia may also occur, most commonly in patients with a predisposition to or underlying bone marrow suppression. Pharmacokinetics Linezolid is 100% bioavailable after oral administration and has a half-life of 4–6 hours. It is metabolized by oxidative metabolism, yielding two inactive metabolites. It is neither an inducer nor an inhibitor of cytochrome P450 enzymes. Peak serum concentrations average 18 g/mL following a 600 mg oral dose. The recommended dose for most indications is 600 mg twice daily, either orally or intraveneously. Clinical uses Vancomycin-resistant E faecium infections; nosocomial pneumonia(医院获得性肺炎); community-acquired pneumonia(社区获得性肺炎); skin infections Linezolid

  23. Part1-4 Streptogramins(链阳性菌素) Streptogramins are effective in the treatment of Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA) and Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus (VRE), two of the most rapidly-growing strains of multidrug-resistant bacteria. Members include: Quinupristin/dalfopristin (喹奴普丁/达福普丁) Pristinamycin Virginiamycin NXL 103, a new oral streptogramin currently in phase II trials (As of). It will be used to treat respiratory tract infections. Streptogramins

  24. Quinupristin/dalfopristin (喹奴普丁/达福普丁 ) • A mixtureof two streptogramins in a ratio of thirty to seventy, respectively. • They arederived from a streptomycete and then chemically modified. • The drug isnormally reserved for the treatment of vancomycin-resistant Entero coccusfaecium (VRE).

  25. Mechanism of action • Each component of this combination drug binds to a separate site onthe 50S bacterial ribosome, forming a stable ternary complex. Thus,they synergistically interrupt protein synthesis. The combination drugis bactericidal and has a long postantibiotic effect. • Resistance • Enzymatic processes commonly account for resistance to these agents.For example, the presence of a ribosomal enzyme that methylates thetarget bacterial 23S ribosomal RNA site can interfere in quinupristinbinding. In some cases, the enzymatic modifi cation can change theaction from bactericidal to bacteriostatic. Plasmid-associated acetyltransferaseinactivates dalfopristin. An active efflux pump can alsodecrease levels of the antibiotics in bacteria.

  26. Antibacterial spectrum • The combination drug is active primarily against gram-positive cocci,including those resistant to other antibiotics (for example, methicillinresistantstaphylococci). • Its primary use is in the treatment of E. faecium (屎肠球菌) infections, including VRE strains. The drug is not eff ective againstEnterococcus faecalis(粪肠球菌).

  27. Pharmacokinetics • Quinupristin/dalfopristin is injected intravenously (the drug is incompatiblewith a saline medium). • The combination drug penetrates macrophagesand polymorpho nucleocytes, a property that is important,because VRE are intracellular. Levels in the CSF are low. Both compoundsundergo metabolism. • The products are less active than the parent inthe case of quinupristin and are equally active in the case of dalfopristin. • Most of the parent drugs and metabolites are cleared through the liverand eliminated via the bile into the feces. Urinary excretionis secondary.

  28. Adverse eff ects 1. Venous irritation 2. Arthralgia and myalgia: These have been reported when higher levels of the drugs are employed. 3. Hyperbilirubinemia( 高胆红素血症): Total bilirubin is elevated in about 25 percentof patients, resulting from a competition with the antibiotic forexcretion. 4. Interactions: • Because of the ability of quinupristin/dalfopristin toinhibit the cytochrome P450 (CYP3A4) isozyme, concomitant admin-istration with drugs that are metabolized by this pathway may leadto toxicities. • A drug interaction with digoxin appearsto occur by the same mechanism as that caused by erythromycin.

  29. Let’s have a rest!

More Related