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Normally, the bacteria produce the penicillin binding proteins with low penicillin-affinity<scene name='48/483886/Conserved_residues_of_pbp/2'>low affinity</scene> by transformation, which is a kind of gene modification. Through this way, bacteria could have a relatively higher resistance to β-lactams antibiotics. But staphylococcus is a special case, it strengthens the drug resistance by two ways instead of gene exchange. By the raised dissociation constants for the non-covalent pre-acylation and the dropped penicillin-sensitive microscopic rate constant for acylation, staphylococcus enhance its own drug resistance.<ref>PMID:15226303</ref>
Normally, the bacteria produce the penicillin binding proteins with low penicillin-affinity<scene name='48/483886/Conserved_residues_of_pbp/2'>low affinity</scene> by transformation, which is a kind of gene modification. Through this way, bacteria could have a relatively higher resistance to β-lactams antibiotics. But staphylococcus is a special case, it strengthens the drug resistance by two ways instead of gene exchange. By the raised dissociation constants for the non-covalent pre-acylation and the dropped penicillin-sensitive microscopic rate constant for acylation, staphylococcus enhance its own drug resistance.<ref>PMID:15226303</ref>
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And the solution to the penicillin binding proteins drug resistance could be semi-synthetic β-lactams. The mechanism is that semi-synthetic β-lactams have the alternative side chain compared to the normal penicillins and it will make penicillin binding proteins have the higher affinity to it and as a result the increasing drug resistance will be solved.[4]
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And the solution to the penicillin binding proteins drug resistance could be semi-synthetic β-lactams. The mechanism is that semi-synthetic β-lactams have the alternative side chain compared to the normal penicillins and it will make penicillin binding proteins have the higher affinity to it and as a result the increasing drug resistance will be solved.<ref>PMID:3082839</ref>
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==References==
==References==
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<references/>
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3. Cosimo Fuda, Maxim Suvorov, Sergei B. Vakulenko and Shahriar Mobashery. “The Basis for Resistance to β-Lactam Antibiotics by Penicillin-binding Protein 2a of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.” June 28, 2004
 
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4. Ohi N, Aoki B, Shinozaki T, Moro K, Noto T, Nehashi T, Okazaki H and Matsunaga I. “Semisynthetic beta-lactam antibiotics. I. Synthesis and antibacterial activity of new ureidopenicillin derivatives having catechol moieties. “1986 Feb
 

Revision as of 20:22, 10 April 2016


This Sandbox is Reserved from January 19, 2016, through August 31, 2016 for use for Proteopedia Team Projects by the class Chemistry 423 Biochemistry for Chemists taught by Lynmarie K Thompson at University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 425 through Sandbox Reserved 439.


Penicillin binding protein/lactivicin (inhibitor) (2jch)[1]

by Tyler Carpenter, Samuel Pierce, Hyunjoon Choi, Anton El Khoury and Tiankai Zhang

Student Projects for UMass Chemistry 423 Spring 2016

Key player in cell rescue from the imminent death (2jch)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
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