Tragic Tale Of Peregrine Falcon Family Nesting In St. Paul - 98.1
Antibiotic Resistance, Mutation Rates And MRSA
As worrisome as MRSA is, it is just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak. In fact, there are a number of far more threatening drug-resistant bacteria in existence, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa. P. Aeruginosa poses a greater threat because it has certain biological features that make it more readily resistant to antibiotics than MRSA. For example, P. Aeruginosa has a highly impermeable outer membrane, whereas MRSA does not. This outer membrane makes it more difficult for antibiotic chemical compounds to actually get inside the bacterial cell so that they can inflict damage. Moreover, once the antibiotic compounds are inside it, P. Aeruginosa has what are known as efflux pumps, which can very quickly pump foreign compounds like antibiotics back out of the cell before they have a chance to do damage. MRSA does not have efflux pumps. Because of these biological features, P. Aeruginosa infections either quickly evolve multidrug resistance or are drug-resistant from the start. Unlike with MRSA, however, the likelihood of picking up a P. Aeruginosa infection from a doorknob in a school building is practically nil. P. Aeruginosa infections occur mostly among hospital patients—at least for now.
In both the hospital and the community, antibiotic resistance has emerged as a major public health problem. In fact, some scientists consider it the most important public health problem of the twenty-first century. The problem exists not just because bacterial mutation rates lead to a rapid accumulation of mutations (including drug-resistant mutations), but also because of the selective pressures that antibiotics impose. If a drug-resistant phenotype were to evolve and there were no antibiotic present, then that phenotype would fare no better than any other bacterial phenotype. In other words, it wouldn't flourish, and it might even die out. It is only when antibiotics are used that drug-resistant phenotypes have a selective advantage and survive.
Of course, not all mutations confer resistance, and most probably have nothing at all to do with resistance. That said, bacterial populations with especially high mutation rates (so-called "hypermutable" strains) often have higher antibiotic resistance rates. For example, in a study of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients infected with P. Aeruginosa (which is a major cause of sickness and death among CF patients), where more than a third of all CF patients had hypermutable P. Aeruginosa infections, the hypermutable populations had higher resistance rates than isolates with "normal" mutation rates (Oliver et al., 2000). Plus, there are other ways that bacteria evolve resistance, in addition to spontaneous nucleotide base mutations. For instance, bacteria can acquire resistance genes through conjugation (i.E., from plasmid DNA) and from recombination with other bacterial DNA following transformation.
The emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance has become such an important public health problem that many federal and state public health agencies now distribute educational posters to encourage "good hygiene" practices—practices that prevent the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria from one person to another and help keep those mutant S. Aureus bacteria off doorknobs. Maybe you have seen one of these posters in a school hallway, in a locker room, or in a public bathroom, imploring you to wash your hands with soap and water to help prevent disease.
To make MRSA matters even worse, in 2002, health care workers reported the first cases of vancomycin-resistant MRSA. In other words, even "last-resort" vancomycin doesn't always work. Therein lies the crisis: People are dying from "simple" bacterial infections, all because of a very low mutation rate.
Human Histones Show Promise In Fighting Bacterial Infections
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Antibiotic Resistance
The problem of antibiotic resistance is an active area of research within the department. Some scientists are investigating the details and mechanisms of how bacteria acquire resistance to different groups of antibiotics. Others are looking for new ways to combat infections that resist the available antibiotic drugs. One of these groups is employing bacteriophages, while another group is working towards developing a probiotic cocktail that could be used to treat drug-resistant diseases.
Resistance to fluoroquinolone antibiotics
Dr. Lynn Zechiedrich has been studying the problem of antibiotic resistance for over 25 years. One research focus in her laboratory has been toward understanding the mechanism of action of and the mechanisms of resistance to the antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones, some of the most potent, widely prescribed, and broad-spectrum antibiotics in use world-wide. The fluoroquinolone class of antibiotics includes ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin, among others.
The fluoroquinolones act by targeting two essential bacterial enzymes known as topoisomerases - gyrase and topoisomerase IV - which help control the winding and unwinding of DNA strands during important cellular processes such as DNA replication, recombination, transcription, and chromosome segregation. During these cellular processes, DNA strands are temporarily broken by topoisomerases. The broken DNA intermediate form is normally short-lived, but in the presence of the fluoroquinolone antibiotics, the intermediate form is stabilized, resulting in bacterial cell death. The Zechiedrich laboratory uses biochemical, biophysical, and genetic approaches to determine how topoisomerases carry out their cellular roles and how drugs block their function.
In another line of research, Dr. Zechiedrich and colleagues are investigating whether the drug ciclopirox, an off-patent anti-fungal agent, could be repurposed as a candidate for antibiotic use, particularly against multidrug resistant gram-negative bacteria. The ability to use a drug designed to combat one type of microorganism for use against another could circumvent the time and money associated with developing a new drug.
The Zechiedrich group reported that ciclopirox inhibited the growth of even multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacteria Acinetobacter baumannii, Escherichia coli, and Klebsiella pneumoniae. They further investigated the mechanism of action and found that the drug affected sugar metabolism in the bacteria, altering the composition of molecules in the outer membrane of the bacterial cell. In their current research in this area, they are pursuing the drug target as a potentially new target for new antibiotic development.
Resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics
Beta-lactam antibiotics are the most widely used class of drugs for the treatment of bacterial infections. They include penicillin and its derivatives, such as methicillin and amoxicillin, as well as other groups of antibiotics known as the cephalosporins, carbapenems, and monobactams. The beta-lactam ring portion of the antibiotic targets the penicillin-binding proteins (PBP), found in the bacterial cell membrane, which function in the synthesis of the cell wall. Binding of the antibiotic to the PBPs prevents the PBPs from performing their essential role and results in the death of the bacterial cell.
Dr. Timothy Palzkill, professor of Pharmacology and Chemical Biology and Molecular Virology and Microbiology, and his research team have been studying mechanisms of resistance to the beta-lactam antibiotics. In gram-negative bacteria, the most common mechanism of resistance is the hydrolysis, or breaking apart, of the antibiotics by enzymes referred to as the beta-lactamases. There are two broad classes of beta-lactamases, the serine-β-lactamases and the metallo-β-lactamases. Dr. Palzkill and his group use a variety of advanced genetic, biochemical, and physical techniques to understand details about the structure and function of both groups of the beta-lactamases and their interactions with drug-resistant forms of antibiotics that are subject to drug resistance.
Instead of drug resistance through the action of beta-lactamases, gram-positive bacteria acquire resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics through the production of a protein called PBP2a, which is able to avoid the inhibitory effects of the antibiotics. This is the mechanism by which methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is able to persist despite treatment with multiple beta-lactam antibiotics. Dr. Palzkill and coworkers conducted a study in which they found that the protein BLIP-II was able to weakly bind and inhibit PBP2a, making it susceptible to beta-lactam antibiotics. They are continuing this line of research by searching for mutations that increase the affinity of BLIP-II to PBP2a.
Resistance to colistin
The reduction in treatment options due to the increased prevalence beta-lactamases that break down beta-lactam antibiotics has led to the increased use of polymyxin antibiotics such as colistin. Polymyxins are polypeptides that act by binding to and subsequently disrupting the bacterial membrane. The recent emergence and spread of a plasmid-encoded, transferable colistin resistance gene, mcr-1, is a cause for concern. The mcr-1 gene encodes an enzyme, MCR-1, that modifies a component of the membrane and blocks colistin binding.
Dr. Palzkill and his group have determined the X-ray structure of one important functional region of the MCR-1 protein. In order to more fully understand the mechanism of MCR-1, they are working to determine the structure of the full-length MCR-1 enzyme. In addition, the laboratory is working to discover inhibitors of the MCR-1 enzyme that would circumvent resistance and broaden treatment options for colistin.
Use of bacteriophages to combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria
Bacteriophages are viruses that specifically kill bacteria. Drs. Anthony Maresso, Frank Ramig, and Barbara Trautner and their colleagues have been investigating the feasibility of using bacteriophages, or phages, to combat drug-resistant bacteria. This idea was originally proposed by Felix d'Herelle in 1926, but following the discovery and initial successes of antibiotics, this approach was largely dropped (although several Eastern European nations have used this approach to successfully treat some bacterial infections).
Given the current limitations in treating drug-resistant bacterial infections, the researchers have revisited this idea and set about to determine whether phages can be effective at killing a large group of bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics. Their bacterial target was a specific group of Escherichia coli, called ST131, that colonize the gastrointestinal tract, but can infect sites outside the intestines (this category of E. Coli is known as extraintestinal pathogenic E. Coli), and is considered the predominant cause of all antibiotic-resistant E. Coli infections in the United States. The bacteria are multi-drug resistant, in addition to producing deadly virulence factors; failure to control their growth can lead to sepsis, which can be fatal.
In their study, they sought to identify phages that would kill 12 strains of antibiotic-resistant bacteria that were isolated from patients. They did this by first isolating phages from the feces of birds and dogs, which are known to be reservoirs for the E. Coli ST131 bacteria, and then testing to see if the phages lysed, or killed, the bacteria in a laboratory test. Although no single phage could kill all 12 bacterial strains in lab cultures, they found combinations of two or three phages that were effective against all the bacteria they tested.
Next, they tested the phages to find out if they could also kill the antibiotic-resistant bacteria in a mouse model of sepsis. When delivered into the animals, the phages reduced the levels of bacteria and substantially improved the health of the mice. The results demonstrated that phages isolated from the environment, with little experimental manipulation, can be effective in combating even very serious infections by E. Coli superbugs.
There are several advantages to using phages instead of antibiotics to combat bacterial infections. Phages do not infect human cells. They are very specific for certain species or strains of bacteria, so that they can be used to target the "bad" bacteria, while not harming the "good" intestinal microbiota. However, they can be made to act broadly via cocktails, if desired. In addition, phages can evolve, so should resistance against a set of phages develop, new phages could be identified in the environment or evolved in the laboratory in a matter of days, unlike antibiotics which can take many years, at great cost, to develop. While the scientists are still somewhat cautious about this approach, as sometimes a host's immune system can neutralize the activities of phages and some phages may not work well in animals, they are continuing to explore this option.
In another study, these researchers found that certain metals enhance the killing of E. Coli ST131 bacteria by phages in blood. They observed that when they treated E. Coli ST131 with phage, the phage effectively killed the bacteria in culture medium but not in blood. The blood samples contained a chemical called EDTA which was used to prevent clotting and is known to bind to metals. They saw more efficient bacterial killing in blood treated with heparin, a natural anti-clotting factor, suggesting that the differing outcomes may be due to the level of metals in the blood.
When they added the metals calcium, magnesium, and iron, which are commonly found in blood, they found that the inhibition of ST131 killing by EDTA was overcome by the addition of the metals. Furthermore, metal-enhanced killing was observed for several other strains of extraintestinal pathogenic E. Coli, not only ST131. Metals also enhanced ST131 killing in a mouse model system. This work points to the essential role of metals for bacterial killing by phage in blood.
Antibiotic treatment alters the intestinal microbiota resulting in hard-to-treat Clostridium difficile infections
Clostridium difficile is a gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium that is considered to be one of the three highest risk drug-resistant infections in the United States, as classified by the CDC. It is an opportunistic infection that infects the colon of patients following antibiotic treatment. The microbiota that inhabit the gut normally prevent C. Difficile colonization and suppress C. Difficile-associated disease, but treatment with antibiotics results in changes to the composition of microbiota that allow C. Difficile to grow and cause disease.
C. Difficile produces toxins that damage intestinal cells and cause inflammation, producing diarrhea, and can be fatal. Of nearly 500,000 infections each year, approximately 29,000 result in death. It is the most common cause of hospital-acquired infections in developed countries. The infection is very difficult to treat, with many patients suffering from recurrent infections. The bacterium is naturally resistant to many common antibiotics, such as the fluoroquinolones, so investigators are searching for alternate ways to treat the disease.
Dr. Robert Britton and his research group are interested in understanding how the intestinal microbiota provides a barrier to incoming pathogens and how perturbation of the microbiota can result in infections, primarily C. Difficile infections. They have developed mini-bioreactors and mice colonized with a human intestinal microbiota to determine which members of the microbial community are responsible for inhibiting C. Difficile invasion. Their goal is to develop a probiotic cocktail, derived from the human intestinal microbiota, that will suppress C. Difficile invasion.
Researchers have found that two C. Difficile lineages, RT027 and RT078, have become more predominant and virulent in the last couple of decades, causing major outbreaks. To identify factors that have enhanced the virulence of these two lineages, Dr. Britton and his colleagues investigated what sources of food RT027 and RT078 preferred. Their study showed that the virulent lineages were highly efficient in their use of the dietary sugar trehalose (which is found in diet soda and is used to stabilize processed foods), giving these microbes a competitive advantage over other, less virulent bacteria.
Using their mouse model, they found that the mice receiving trehalose in their diet had more severe disease, with higher mortality rates, and they produced higher levels of toxins. These results suggest that the introduction of trehalose as a food additive into the human diet, shortly before the emergence of these two epidemic lineages, helped select for their emergence and contributed to virulence. This study further demonstrates that diet can influence the composition of the microbiota and response to infection.
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