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Offline LT72884

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understanding resistance
« on: July 18, 2012, 04:06:48 PM »
Hello all. I am a new member here. I JUST finished my first semester and class EVER of chemistry. So please bare in mind that my question/theory may be completely bass ackwards. I am a Mechanical Engineering student. I am in my first semseter ever of calc. totally awesome i have made it this far in life. i love it. I have three areas i am deciding to go into as a career. But ill startt with my question

Ok, i know that most bacteria are carbon based life forms. To me, my theory(maybe someone else has it to but i dont know) is that one of the reasons these bacteria are gaining resistance to anitbiotics is this:

Using natural(living organisms) antibiotics from a natural source such as olive leaf extract(works great), other herbs and also including ones such as bread mold(penicillin) and the ones from vegetable decay and soil(Streptomyces  aomiensis), and other prescribed ones that are from living organisms(did i spell that right? i always miss that up with another word that means something wayyyy different. hahahah) are carbon based as well. So my theory is that since the bacteria is carbon based, it can mutate itself as needs be to resist other carbon based threats such as immune systems and antibiotics.

Thats why i think things like siltran for burns works great as its not carbon based. So using silver as an antibiotic(proper amounts and colloids as so people do not turn blue from poisoning) and other things not carbon based my be a key. thats just my thinking. In no way shape or form am i bashing modern or wholestic medicine. My mom is head nurse at U of U hospital and i respect modern medicine. thanks yall. just trying to understand things from both sides of the picture.

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: understanding resistance
« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2012, 05:09:21 PM »
All bacteria are carbon-based, but they often show enough differences relative to mammals to make it possible for some antibiotics to work.  Many bacteria can exchange small bits of DNA that are called plasmids.  The genes that are exchanged when plasmids are shared included genes for certain kinds of antibiotic resistance.  So if one species develops resistance, it is likely that other species will eventually obtain the same genetic information.  Obviously, there is much more to bacterial resistance than plasmids, but this might be a good place to start.

Offline Arkcon

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Re: understanding resistance
« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2012, 07:51:11 PM »
I'm afraid LT72884: that you're on some sort of buzzword kick, mentioning carbon-based again and again.  FYI, all living things on the planet Earth are carbon-based.  And all known life is carbon-based.  The term 'carbon-based' is only a useful definition for science fiction, contrasting it with other, fictional lifeforms.  Briefly, populations of living things face a variety of selective pressures that they have to adapt to, like for example temperature.  Which isn't carbon-based or not carbon based ... it isn't even a thing.  So you can see an example where your logic fails.
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

Offline fledarmus

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Re: understanding resistance
« Reply #3 on: July 19, 2012, 09:17:14 AM »
As Arkcon said, all life that we know of is carbon based. This is a red herring. The carbon-based nature of many compounds used as drugs has nothing to do with the way that they affect bacteria or with the ways bacteria develop resistance to them. In fact, bacteria develop resistance to silver as well - see for example http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0147619X9290008X

The trick, as Babcock-Hall pointed out, is to find a process that bacteria require to survive and find a way to block that process, killing the bacteria. We can't use a process that we also need to survive, or we will kill ourselves as well. Either that, or we need to make sure that whatever compound we are using to kill the bacteria never reach portions of our own bodies where they will be toxic.

One of the differences between mammalian cells and bacterial cells is that bacterial cells use different respiratory pathways which involve reactions on sulfur-containing proteins. Silver ions bind especially well to sulfur, and are easily taken up into bacterial cells. Once inside, they tie up the sulfur atoms preventing respiration (among other things) and the bacteria dies. Mammalian cells have different respiratory pathways and are less reliant on oxidation changes in sulfur atoms. So silver hits bacterial cells much harder than mammalian cells, and by carefully selecting a dose, you can kill lots of bacteria without killing too many mammalian cells and getting undesired side effects. Also, human skin is pretty good at blocking the entrance of ionic compounds, so if the bacteria is on the surface of the skin, you can use a much larger dose without causing too much damage.

Bacterial cells could evolve resistance to silver in several ways. One would be to become less reliant on the sulfur mediated respiration systems and substitute other pathways, one would be to sequester the silver atoms inside the cell in vacuoles or in scavenger proteins, one would be to evolve efflux pathways that send any silver ions back out of the cells as they enter, and one would be to develop membranes that are less permeable to the entrance of silver. All of these pathways seem to be followed to some extent in different types of bacteria.

Bacteria is actually a fairly easy target, in one sense. Bacteria cells are very different from mammalian cells, and there are a lot of different mechanisms that can be targeted in bacteria without doing too much damage to the mammalian cells they might be associated with. However, many bacteria have evolved effective mechanisms for changing their genomes and protein expression, which allows them a lot of diversity when faced with a biological threat. Resistant strains develop fairly rapidly to many challenges.

As the cells get closer and closer to normal mammalian cells, it is harder and harder to kill undesired cells without causing serious side effects. This is one reason that cancer is such a difficult target - cancer cells are human cells, using for the most part normal human processes for growth and division. The only options for developing cancer treatments are to find the very subtle differences and target those processes alone, or to find ways to keep the drug localized at the tumor without being distributed through the rest of the body. This is also one reason that viruses are such difficult targets. The viruses aren't truly alive and thus can't be killed by interfering with their life processes like bacteria can. They don't become active until they have actually infected a human cell, and now you have to find a way to kill that cell without killing the uninfected human cells. Fortunately viruses can be recognized as non-human by the immune system and targeted for destruction, while cancer cells having been human all too often are not targeted by the immune system.

Just wandering - I hope some of this is useful.

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: understanding resistance
« Reply #4 on: July 19, 2012, 11:18:43 AM »
The genetic code is nearly universal--bacteria and mammals both use the same codons for the same amino acids.  Both synthesize proteins using ribosomes.  Yet there are enough differences between bacterial ribosomes and mammalian ribosome to allow the ribosome to be a target for some antibacterials, such as streptomycin, for example.  On the other hand bacteria can acquire resistance to streptomycin if they have a mutation in a particular ribosomal protein, although I have forgotten which one.

Offline Jasim

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Re: understanding resistance
« Reply #5 on: July 19, 2012, 02:01:03 PM »
Maybe next semester you should take a course in genetics.

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