Now that you know what the top 5 antibiotic resistant infections are, let’s keep it goin and talk about the different classes of antibiotics and what they do

I’ll start by listing the top 10 generic antibiotics below 👇🏾

#DrTJWrites
I’ll start by listing them below, then organizing them by structural class

1) amoxicillin
2) doxycycline
3) cephalexin
4) ciprofloxacin
5) clindamycin
6) metronidazole
7) azithromycin
8) sulfamethoxazole + trimethoprim
9) amoxicillin + clavulanate
10) levofloxacin
Many of these are in different structural classes so let’s talk about those

A) Penicillins/β-lactams (amoxicillin)

These antibiotics are called β-lactams because of their structure

A lactam is an organic structure that is cyclic (fused ring) and contains nitrogen.
They’re specifically called β-lactams because the β tells you were the nitrogen is in relation to the carbon attached to the double bonded oxygen (carbonyl carbon).

It is 2 carbons away from the carbonyl carbon. α is 1. β is 2 in this naming convention.
β-lactams work by inhibiting cell wall synthesis in bacteria.

The cell wall is an essential structure in bacteria and when it is disrupted, the bacteria dies. The drug works because it mimics the the amino acid blueprint used to make the cell wall and it gets incorporated.
So the bacteria tries to use the drug to make its cell wall because it looks like a common cell wall precursor.

It gets incorporated and disrupts wall integrity causing the bacterial contents to leak out and the bacteria dies.

Now notice 9) includes clavulanate. Why?
Clavulanate is a β-lactamase inhibitor

Well what is β-lactamase?

The suffix -ase in biochemistry indicates an enzyme. An enzyme is a protein that causes reactions to happen faster.

β-lactamase is an enzyme that can break β-lactam rings. Where would you encounter this?
In penicillin resistant bacteria

These bacteria have created a enzyme that busts these drugs open at the lactam so they cannot disrupt cell wall integrity

Clavulanate inhibits this enzyme so that your penicillin of choice can still work.
There are 4 different antibiotic classes that contain β-lactam rings

The difference in the 4 is the structure surrounding the β-lactam ring

These different structures slightly modulate the activity of the drug typically in

*metabolic half-life
*substrate binding
B) Cephalosporins (Cephalexin)

This same cartoon that we used above also contains cephalosporins. They also contain β-lactam rings so they work the same way as penicillins.
C) Tetracyclines (doxycycline)

Tetracyclines are exactly what they say they are

Tetra-4
Cycline-circle/cycle

Tetracyclines are organic molecules with 4 fused rings together. They are lettered a-d.
Tetracyclines are not bactericidal, which means they don’t kill bacteria, they inhibit their growth.

The growth inhibition comes from disrupting protein synthesis by binding to parts of the ribosome (protein coder) that are read to make these proteins.
D) Fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin)

Fluoroquinolones are simply quinolones that have fluorine attached to them.

They are synthetic derivatives of naturally occurring compounds called quinolines, anti-malaria compounds originally found in cinchona bark.
These compounds work by destroying bacterial DNA so they cannot replicate.

This chart also illustrates how changing things around the ring changes the activity of the molecule.

This is fairly standard for drugs and follows a concept called SAR, structure activity relationship
E) Lincomycin (clindamycin)

Lincomycins are amino acid (blue circle) and sugar (red circle) conjugates that have a similar mode of action to tetracyclines, inhibiting growth via disrupted protein synthesis.
Lincomycins are interesting because they actually come from bacteria, specifically Streptomyces lincolnensis.

When bacteria are competing for resources and space, some will send out molecules that will help by eliminating the competition.
F) Nitroimidazoles (metronidazole)

Nitroimidazoles are derivatives of the common organic molecule imidazole that contain a nitro group (NO2). These drugs are bactericidal and thought to work again by destroying bacterial DNA preventing replication.
G) Macrolides (azithromycin)

Macrolides are huge biomolecules that are typically a 8+ membered lactone ring fused to two other molecules, typically sugars

Below are the naming conventions and the common structures.

These molecules were originally found in Actinomycetales
Here again we have an agent produced by bacteria to kill other competing bacteria

Survival of the fittest extends to the microscopic scale
H) Sulfonamides (sulfamethoxazole)

Sulfonamides combine two classic organic chemistry motifs

The sulfone (sulfur double bonded to two separate oxygens)

The amine (NH2)

They also are not limited to being antibiotics as you can see in the cartoon below
Sulfonamides work by inhibiting folic acid synthesis through direct competition with PABA, para-amino benzoic acid.

The only difference is the sulfonamide (left) replaces the carboxylic acid. (Right)
Man that took a lot longer than I thought 😂😂

These are your common antibiotics, what they look like, and how they work. Next time we’ll look at how scientists are trying to replace these drugs and curb drug resistance. If you enjoyed this thread, Rt the 1st tweet 🙏🏾
And if you wanna know why this topic is important, go here 👇🏾

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More from @Dr_TJRicks

Jul 27
What if I told you that antibiotic resistance is a larger problem than c0nv1d ever was?

Would you believe me?

Replacing antibiotics is one of the top priority problems for humans since 2016

Today we’ll talk about the top 5 antibiotic resistant diseases of concern

#DrTJWrites
Look at these lil goofy mfs 💀

Anyway let’s get started.

First of all what is an antibiotic?

I don’t think they’ve changed the definition recently so an antibiotic is simply a medicine that either stops microbes from growing or destroys them completely.
Antibiotics are classed based on their chemical structure.

A few classes that you may have heard of are:

*aminoglycosides
*carbapenems
*penicillins (more commonly known as β-lactams)

These drugs typically work by targetting crucial structures inside of the microbe.
Read 20 tweets
Mar 30
Found this article while I was doing my googles for a company I’m interviewing with this week.
I had no idea that the stretch between Baton Rouge and NOLA was called Cancer Alley by locals because of the elevated risk of cancer from petrochem fumes

amp.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/n…
A lot of people ask my why I didn’t go into big farmuh given my skill set and my honest answer is I have a moral objection to it. (See plannedemic)

However I’d never considered how these petrochemical giants poison people as well

lailluminator.com/2021/07/02/sci…
@StephenCurry30 production company even did a documentary about it

Wish these things were talked about more instead of the silly shit people get on here and argue about for hours

wafb.com/2021/10/07/ste…
Read 10 tweets
Mar 17
Quick story before I teach my Gen chem minions

So my close people know that I’ve been looking for a new position. I had an interview for a lead chemist position last Friday.

Got feedback from it on Tuesday, and as I thought, it went really well. Specific feedback I got 👇🏾
From the hiring manager:
“I don’t think Tanei would ever let himself down in this position. I’m not worried about our expectations for him. I’m worried about him beating himself up if he doesn’t get something done.

I really like his personality and his charisma. Above all I like
His confidence. You can feel his confidence when he speaks about the things he’s done and wants to do”

They interviewed 5 ppl. They selected two for a second interview. I was one. The other is someone who’s been a process chemist for years.
Read 8 tweets
Mar 3
Mannnnnn

Lie-zer really had to hire more people to process adverse event reporting because they were getting so many of them that’s wild as fuck.
158,893 reported adverse events reported in 3 months.

3 months 😳
Read 8 tweets
Feb 18
Dawg if this is legit (not saying it isn’t) this is terrifying

Your blood cells are not supposed to stick together like this. Rouleaux formation prevents proper body oxygenation and is a sign of serious disease or infection

Vcd ppl better hope this is fake.
Dawg if your blood cells stick together like that you eventually get into a low oxygen environment then secondary parasitic and bacterial infections can set in

Low oxygen environments also encourage cancer cell growth

And we’ve already seen these reports of cancer rise. Mannnn
So this spike gp leads to

*rouleaux
*t-cell invasion and exhaustion
*DNA shearing
*heart inflammation

And they want y’all to keep getting one every 6 months.

Wow.

And the mRNA doesn’t degrade as fast as they say it does.

I legit have a knot in my stomach
Read 4 tweets

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