Indiana University researchers are advancing knowledge about how bacteria build their cell walls that could contribute to the search for new antibacterial drugs. They have created a new tool to observe living cells in real time under a microscope.
“If you look at the history, no one’s really discovered a fundamentally new
class of antibiotic for the past 40 to 50 years,” said IU chemist Michael VanNieuwenhze, who led the study.
“Antibiotic resistance is a significant and urgent public health threat, and we
think that new ways to address it — including this — have significant value.”
The need for new ways to study bacteria is driven in large part by the
threat of bacterial resistance. According to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, at
least 2 million people in the U.S. get an antibiotic-resistant
infection each year, and at least 23,000 people die.
“This new technology takes advantages of specific cellular enzymes to stick
colored dyes — or ‘probes’ — into the walls of bacterial cells,” VanNieuwenhze
said. “Since these same enzymes are inhibited by other well-known antibacterial
compounds — most notably, penicillin — we could theoretically also use these
probes to seek out entirely new classes of drugs that inhibit the same
reaction.”
VanNieuwenhze’s lab has already
created two other cellular probes patented through IU — called FDAAs
(fluorescent D-amino acids) and DAADs (d-amino acid dipeptides) — which are in
use in laboratories across the globe. Their new class of probes, which build
upon these earlier advances, are called rotor-fluorogenic D-amino acids, or
RfDAAs. IU has also filed for a patent on this technology.
The main advantage of RfDAAs is their ease of use and ability to show
cellular activity in real time.This is because the probes don’t require washing
steps to remove unincorporated chemicals that blur the distinct boundaries
between bacterial cells and their surrounding environment.
Instead, RfDAAs only light up when they’re integrated into bacteria’s cell
walls as part of the regular growth process. The probes illuminate cell walls
faster and clearer without the steps that can stop cellular activity.
It’s the difference between a snapshot and a video, VanNieuwenhze said. A
video provides much more information about how cell walls grow, change and
interact with their environment.
Already, VanNieuwenhze has launched a collaboration with IU School of
Medicine to apply these methods to the search for new inhibitors of bacterial
cell wall synthesis, and the probes are also in use to study bacterial cell
division, which may unveil new targets for antibiotic discovery. In addition,
the biotechnology company ThermoFisher Scientific recently purchased exclusive
rights to market the two earlier probes as commercial products; other
industrial groups have reached out about applying the technology to
high-throughput screens designed to identify new drug leads.
Source:
https://news.iu.edu/stories/2019/03/iub/releases/01-research-advances-antibiotics-search.html
https://news.iu.edu/stories/2019/03/iub/releases/01-research-advances-antibiotics-search.html
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