The drug, dubbed
«New drugs are not being approved because they share the same target to which the bacteria are developing resistance. We have not only defined a new and effective target, we have designed a drug to attack it without affecting normal cells," says Grant Pierce, St. Boniface Hospital Executive Director of Research and University of Manitoba professor of physiology and pathophysiology. «The first pathogen our research team studied (Chlamydia trachomatis) has confirmed that NQR is a good target, and it is shared by many bacteria in need of a more effective antibiotic.»
The paper, «Development of a novel rationally designed antibiotic to inhibit a nontraditional bacterial target», revealed that a variety of bacteria share a unique respiratory sodium pump (NQR) that supplies energy vital to the bacteria’s survival. The study showed that the new drug,
The list of
NQR-possessing bacteria is growing steadily as genomic information becomes available. With more than 20 different pathogenic bacteria containing NQR, the possibility for this drug to avoid multidrug resistance through NQR inhibition represents a potential breakthrough in antibiotic design.
«The results from our collaboration are tremendously exciting," says lead author Pavel Dibrov, professor in the U of M’s Faculty of Science. «We are currently designing
Traditional targets for antibiotics are limited. No new antibiotics have been discovered since 1987 and only 2 antibiotics have received US FDA approval since 2009.
«Antibiotic and antimicrobial resistance to superbugs is a priority research direction in pharmacology. The quality and findings of this study may be instrumental in our efforts to develop new drugs and technologies that effectively address this global health alarm recently raised by the World Health Organization," says CJPP editors Ghassan Bkaily and Pedro D’Orlé
In regards to antibiotic resistance, Global health agencies publish a frightening number: in 35 years, if left unchecked,
«New antibiotics targeting this priority list of pathogens will help to reduce deaths due to resistant infections around the world," said professor Evelina Tacconelli, Head of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Tübingen, at the presentation of the WHO list. «Waiting any longer will cause further public health problems and dramatically impact on patient care.»
Digvir Jayas,
«I applaud the research collaboration that resulted in this new breakthrough," the Distinguished Professor says. «Solving the complex and evolving challenges of antibiotic resistance will put new tools in the hands of caregivers around the globe.»
Source: http://news.umanitoba.ca/new-weapon-in-fight-against-antibiotic-resistance-discovered/