4.4 Article

A New Approach to Counteract Bacteria Resistance: A Comparative Study Between Moxifloxacin and a New Moxifloxacin Derivative in Different Model Systems of Bacterial Membrane

Journal

CHEMICAL BIOLOGY & DRUG DESIGN
Volume 81, Issue 2, Pages 265-274

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cbdd.12071

Keywords

antimicrobial; cardiolipin; Escherichia coli membrane; fluorescence spectroscopy; metalloantibiotic; moxifloxacin

Funding

  1. FCT [PTDC/SAU-FAR/111414/2009, SFRH/BPD/34262/2006]
  2. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/SAU-FAR/111414/2009] Funding Source: FCT

Ask authors/readers for more resources

New drug design has been one of the major challenges to combat bacterial resistance over the past decade. Conventional antibiotics act by destroying bacterial cell wall or by blocking biosynthetic pathways necessary for its survival. Unfortunately, there has been a fast increase in multiresistance, to several conventional antibiotics, in clinical bacterial strains. Previous studies have shown that metalloantibiotics, ternary complexes of antibiotic-metal-phenanthroline, present an increased potential as antimicrobial agents. In this work moxifloxacin, a fourth-generation quinolone, with a broad spectrum of action, and its copper ternary complex (metalloantibiotic) have been study by fluorescence spectroscopy. Partition coefficients were determined and showed that while free moxifloxacin exhibits the same behaviour independently of the lipidic system tested, the metalloantibiotic presents higher partition to liposomes, in a lipid composition-dependent way. These significant differences in the interaction of the metalloantibiotic with model bacteria membranes point out for a putative change in its uptake mechanism with increased druglipid interaction potentiating metalloantibiotic influx.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available