2 resultados para penicillin

em Digital Commons at Florida International University


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Antibiotic resistance has emerged as a severe problem in hospital-acquired infectious disease. The Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa is found to cause secondary infection in immune-compromised patients. Unfortunately, it is resistant to virtually all β-lactam antibiotics such as penicillin, cephalosporin and others. Researchers are seeking for new compounds to treat several antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains. Artemisia plant extracts are commonly used for their therapeutic properties by natives throughout dry regions of North and South America. Here, they are administered as an alternative medicine for stomach problems and other complex health issues. In this study, the antimicrobial effects of plant extracts from several Artemisia species as well as compounds dehydroleucodine and dehydroparishin-B (sesquiterpenes derived specifically from A. douglasiana) were used as treatments against the pathogenicity effects of P. aeruginosa. Results showed that both compounds effectively inhibit the secretion of LasB elastase, biofilm formation and type III secretion, but fail to control LasA protease. This is a significant observation because these virulent factors are crucial in establishing P.aeruginosa infection. The results from this study signify a plausible role for future alternative therapy in the biomedical field, which recommends DhL and DhP can be studied as key compounds against bacterial infections of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

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With the increased antibiotic exposure from anthropogenic sources, soil microbes are an ever-increasing ecological pool of resistant bacteria. This is the case with bacterial resistance to vancomycin through transfer of van-resistance genes by transposons. Studies show that bacterial species other than enteroccoci harbor genetic-like elements such as the Tn1546 transposon containing vancomycin-resistant genes. Overuse and misuse of antibiotics in hospital settings and agricultural practices have led to an increase in transferability of vancomycin-resistant genes among microbes. The objective of this project is to analyze the diversity of these genes found in the soil microbes from Miami-Dade County. Bacterial isolates were Gram-stained and the Kirby-Bauer antibiotic disk diffusion test was performed to determine the degree of resistance. Results showed that all bacterial isolates were resistant to penicillin at the 10 µg concentration and most were susceptible to varying vancomycin concentrations (10 µg, 20 µg, and 30 µg). A 1465 bp fragment was amplified from the 16S rDNA gene using 27F and 1492R universal primers from the multi-antibiotic resistant bacteria and sequenced to identify the isolates. Three Gram-negative bacteria genera were identified with the closest phylogenetic match to: Pseudomonas sp., Stenotrophomonas sp., Xanthomonas sp., as well as two Gram-positive bacteria genera: Bacillus sp. and Brevibacillus sp. The isolates’ vanA and vanB genes were amplified using the respective primers. Ongoing work is underway to sequence and compare these known van resistant genes, with the goal of revealing intrinsic vancomycin resistance present in soil bacteria.