Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print New anthrax inhibitor could combat antibiotic-resistant strains

New anthrax inhibitor could combat antibiotic-resistant strains

August 29, 2006

Troy, N.Y.-In a new approach to treating anthrax exposure, a team of scientists has created an inhibitor designed to tackle the growing threat of antibiotic-resistant strains. Reporting in this week's online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the University of Toronto describe the new anthrax toxin inhibitor, which performed successfully in both laboratory and animal tests.

Anthrax toxin, secreted by the anthrax bacterium, is made of proteins and toxic enzymes that bind together to inflict damage on a host organism. Rather than targeting the anthrax bacterium or toxin-the approach taken by the majority of current therapies-the new inhibitor blocks the receptors where anthrax toxin attaches in the body. And because the nanoscale assembly of molecules is designed to bind to multiple sites on the host receptor, it is naturally more potent.




The new approach led to a 50,000-fold increase in potency in cell culture, and the inhibitor protected rats from anthrax toxin in the study. The general concept also could be applied to designing inhibitors for other pathogens, including SARS, influenza, and AIDS, the researchers note.

ncreased research on possible therapeutics and vaccines to treat toxins that could be used as biological weapons. The current treatment for anthrax exposure is antibiotics, but the emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains calls for new approaches to designing therapeutics for bioterrorism agents, according to Ravi Kane, the Merck Associate Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Rensselaer and corresponding author of the PNAS paper.

Pathogens such as anthrax can become resistant to antibiotics through natural processes, but resistance also can be engineered intentionally. The team's new approach could help address this threat by making inhibitors that target the receptors where anthrax toxin attaches in the body, rather than at the anthrax bacterium or toxin directly.

Blocking "host receptors" is a better approach, Kane suggested. "Think about how a virus-like HIV becomes resistant to an inhibitor that binds to it," he said. "A subtle change in the viral proteins can drastically reduce the affinity of the drug without compromising the ability of the virus to bind to its target cell. However, a host protein is not mutating like proteins on the pathogen. So it's a stationary target versus a moving one."

The inhibitor designed by the Rensselaer-Toronto team is "polyvalent," which means that it displays multiple copies of receptor-binding peptides, allowing it to bind at multiple sites and become more potent than an inhibitor that binds to a single site. For the current experiment, the researchers made four different polyvalent inhibitors and then tested each in cell culture. They found that the most potent of the four inhibitors enabled more than a 50,000-fold enhancement in activity compared to an inhibitor that was not based on polyvalency.

This potent inhibitor was then characterized more fully and tested in rats. Five out of six rats injected only with anthrax toxin died; all six rats injected with toxin and a non-polyvalent inhibitor died. But the new polyvalent inhibitor protected all six rats in the experiment, with no signs of adverse side effects.

Once fully developed, administering the new inhibitor to patients could help reduce the high mortality rates associated with inhalational anthrax, according to the researchers. Antibiotics slow the progression of infection by targeting the anthrax bacterium, but they do not counter the advanced destructive effects of anthrax toxin in the body. Inhalation anthrax still has a fatality rate of 75 percent even after antibiotics are given, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Combining the inhibitor with antibiotic therapy may increase the likelihood of survival for an infected person," Kane said.

The research team is led by Kane and Jeremy Mogridge, Canada Research Chair and assistant professor of laboratory medicine and pathobiology at the University of Toronto. Rensselaer graduate students and post-doctoral researchers who contributed to the work include Saleem Basha, Prakash Rai, Arundhati Saraph, and Kunal Gujraty. University of Toronto researchers included Vincent Poon, Mandy Go, Skanda Sadacharan, and Mia Frost. Funding for the research was provided by the National Institutes of Health.

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute



Related Anthrax Current Events and Anthrax News Articles Anthrax Current Events and Anthrax News RSS Anthrax Current Events and Anthrax News RSS
Milestone biodefense publication by Elsevier journal Vaccine
Last week during the 'Vaccines for Biothreats and Emerging and Neglected Diseases Symposium' in Galveston TX, USA, the Elsevier journal Vaccine released a supplement dedicated to vaccines for biodefense.

Cigarettes Harbor Many Bacteria Harmful to Human Health
Cigarettes are "widely contaminated" with bacteria, including some known to cause disease in people, concludes a new international study conducted by a University of Maryland environmental health researcher and microbial ecologists at the Ecole Centrale de Lyon in France.

New explanation for nature's hardiest life form
Got food poisoning? The cause might be bacterial spores, en extremely hardy survival form of bacteria, a nightmare for health care and the food industry and an enigma for scientists.

Better immune defense against anthrax
Scientists discover a gene in anthrax-causing bacteria may help defend against this form of bio-warfare.

Argonne researchers develop method that aims to stabilize antibodies
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory have developed a systematic method to improve the stability of antibodies.

Early detection and quick response are key to defense against anthrax attack
A large attack on a major metropolitan area with airborne anthrax could affect more than a million people, necessitating their treatment with powerful antibiotics.

Data published in the New England Journal of Medicine support use of raxibacumab (ABthrax) for the treatment of inhalation anthrax
Human Genome Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: HGSI) today announced publication by the New England Journal of Medicine of the results of two pivotal animal efficacy studies, which showed the life-saving potential of the Company's human monoclonal antibody drug raxibacumab.

One secret to how TB sticks with you
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is arguably the world's most successful infectious agent because it knows how to avoid elimination by slowing its own growth to a crawl.

Unexpected discovery can open a new chapter in the fight against tuberculosis
A close relative of the microorganism that causes tuberculosis in humans has been found to form spores.

Genetic switch potential key to new class of antibiotics
Researchers have determined the structure of a key genetic mechanism at work in bacteria, including some that are deadly to humans, in an important step toward the design of a new class of antibiotics.
More Anthrax Current Events and Anthrax News Articles
Among the Living

Among the Living
by Anthrax

Pioneering metal band Anthrax, one of the genre's most influential, innovative and respected groups, melded the speed and fury of hardcore punk with the guitars and vocals of heavy metal to help create speed and thrash metal. Now what many consider the group's greatest album, 1987's "Among The Living," has been expanded with bonus tracks and a concert DVD, and digitally remastered for the first time, for the CD+DVD package AMONG THE LIVING (DELUXE EDITION)

"Among The Living," originally produced by Eddie Kramer and Anthrax, was the band's third full-length album and featured the lineup of singer Joe Belladonna, lead guitarist Dan Spitz, rhythm guitarist Scott Ian, bassist Frank Bello and drummer Charlie Benante. Building on an underground following with signature tracks such as "I...

Among the Living

Among the Living
by Anthrax

If Metallica and Slayer invented speed metal, Anthrax brought it to the East Coast and imbued it with the attitude and excitement of New York hardcore. Among the Living is, without a doubt, their finest hour--a roaring, adrenaline-pumped collection of flailing beats, precise, razor-edged riffs and shout-along refrains. Unlike most full-throttle metal vocalists of the era, Joey Belladonna chose to sing as well as shout, giving songs like "Among the Living," "Indians" and "Efilnikcufecin" ("nice fuckin' life" spelled backwards) a decided melodic edge. Yet Scott Ian and Dan Spitz's buzzsaw guitar flurries, and Charlie Benante's insistent drumming, prevented the songs from ever degenerating into the run-of-the-mill heavy metal they so despised. --Jon Wiederhorn

Caught in a Mosh: BBC Live in Concert

Caught in a Mosh: BBC Live in Concert
by Anthrax

CAUGHT IN A MOSH: BBC LIVE IN CONCERT is the official U.S. debut release of the double CD set, which brings together two live performances from the 1987 UK "Among The Living" tour: their sold out Hammersmith Odeon show and their storming performance at the Donnington Festival.

Spreading the Disease

Spreading the Disease
by Anthrax



Among The Living [Explicit]

Among The Living [Explicit]
Anthrax (Primary Contributor)



We've Come for You All

We've Come for You All
by Anthrax

You'll find no rap metal or nu metal on We've Come for You All--just Anthrax's inimitable thrash-metal melded with contemporary melodies, dynamics, and booming, arena-worthy production. Two way-cool guests--Roger Daltrey and Pantera guitarist Dimebag Darrell--are under-utilized on their respective songs, but with machine-gun, heart-pounding double-bass drums and vocalist John Bush's convincing snarl, it hardly matters. Bush, who has been in Anthrax since the early '90s, has been part of much of the group's best and most mature (if not most commercially successful) material. The dynamic "Superhero" is a winner, as is the radio-ready, not-too-heavy "Safe Home." "Nobody Knows Anything" and "Strap It On" are the best of the heaviest entries. Effective acoustic moments, Scott Ian's guitar...

Persistence of Time

Persistence of Time
by Anthrax



State of Euphoria

State of Euphoria
by Anthrax



Attack of the Killer B's

Attack of the Killer B's
by Anthrax



  Bring The Noise
Anthrax (Primary Contributor)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com