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Recent Articles
Lu T, Zhao X, Li X, Drlica-Wagner A, Wang JY, Domagala J, Drlica
K.
Enhancement of fluoroquinolone activity by C-8 halogen and
methoxy moieties: action against a gyrase resistance mutant of Mycobacterium
smegmatis and a gyrase-topoisomerase IV double mutant of Staphylococcus
aureus.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2001 Oct;45(10):2703-9
PMID: 11557458
The increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance among bacterial
pathogens
prompted a microbiological study of fluoroquinolone structure-activity
relationships with resistant mutants. Bacteriostatic and bactericidal
activities
for 12 fluoroquinolones were examined with a gyrase mutant of Mycobacterium
smegmatis and a gyrase-topoisomerase IV double mutant of Staphylococcus
aureus.
For both organisms C-8 halogen and C-8 methoxy groups enhanced activity.
The MIC
at which 99% of the isolates tested were inhibited (MIC(99)) was
reduced three-
to fivefold for the M. smegmatis mutant and seven- to eightfold
for the S.
aureus mutant by C-8 bromine, chlorine, and methoxy groups. With
both organisms
a smaller reduction in the MIC(99) (two- to threefold) was associated
with a C-8
fluorine moiety. In most comparisons with M. smegmatis the response
to a C-8
substituent was similar (within twofold) for wild-type and mutant
cells. In
contrast, mutant S. aureus was affected more than the wild type
by the addition
of a C-8 substituent. C-8 halogen and methoxy groups also improved
the ability
to kill the two mutants and the respective wild-type cells when
measured with
various fluoroquinolone concentrations during an incubation period
equivalent to
four to five doubling times. Collectively these data help define
a group of
fluoroquinolones that can serve (i) as a base for structure refinement
and (ii)
as test compounds for slowing the development of fluoroquinolone
resistance
during infection of vertebrate hosts.

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