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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: fight + against + resistance  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Drug Resistance Is Slowing Global Fight Against TB
Washington Post, United States - Aug 1, 2008
1 (HealthDay News) -- Standard methods of treating tuberculosis are failing in countries with high rates of multi-drug resistant (MDR) forms of the disease, ...
Remembering Solzhenitsyn: A World Apart
Russia Blog, WA - Aug 3, 2008
When a government starts an earnest fight against terrorism, public opinion immediately accuses it of violating the terrorist's civil rights. ...

AFP
Lebanon: Hezbollah may fight Israel to recover land
Ha'aretz, Israel - Aug 2, 2008
By Yoav Stern and Barak Ravid Lebanon's new government guidelines declare Hezbollah has the right to fight against Israel to "recover the land occupied by ...
Naim Qassem: the resistance is a source of strength for Lebanon iloubnan.info
Lebanon Gov't Adopts Policy Statement Alalam News Network
all 196 news articles »

Fresh News
Fierce fighting erupts as battlefront shifts to Kilinochchi
Sunday Observer, Sri Lanka - Aug 3, 2008
The unanimous voice of the eight SAARC leaders determined to fight against all forms and manifestations of terrorism at the inauguration of the Summit, ...
Another setback for campaign to confer pariah status on SL The Island (subscription)
20 killed, 47 injured in heavy clashes in N Sri Lanka Xinhua
LTTE?s last bastion in Mannar captured Hindu
TamilWeek - Asian Tribune
all 880 news articles »
Drilling donnybrook offers a political fight, not a genuine solution
The News Journal, DE - Aug 4, 2008
Barack Obama's resistance to offshore drilling is weakening. He apparently is looking for a compromise.) So the Republicans are pushing their cause, ...
Qassem warns emigrants against fighting Israel in their host countries
Daily Star - Lebanon, Lebanon - Aug 3, 2008
"However," he added, "resistance is done in Lebanon and against Israel." Tackling recent developments on the Lebanese political scene, Hizbullah's second in ...
Israel fears Hizbullah attack in west Africa Daily Star - Lebanon
all 5 news articles »

Times Online
Israil-?If we fight like Somalis we will be successful? Hamas leader
Mareeg, UK -
?We will fight like Somali Mujahidiin if Israel continues its deadly attacks against us? Zahar said. Addressing a collective wedding party organized by the ...
AlJazeeraEnglish
Jordan tells Abbas infighting threatens Palestinian state Tehran Times
Fatah Expelled From Gaza Evening Bulletin
Mangalorean.com
all 2,991 news articles »

Washington Times
FORE: PEPFAR funding
Washington Times, DC -
The United States is leading in the fight against disease and improving health worldwide, most notably by preventing and treating HIV/AIDS, ...

INTHEFRAY Magazine
Too busy being one of the guys to fight like a girl.
INTHEFRAY Magazine -
My thigh muscles bear the mark of resistance training. Though I could never be mistaken for a man, I embrace my masculine edge in a way that helps me blend ...
Lebanon: 'Right to fight Israel'
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Aug 3, 2008
By David Blair in Beirut Hizbollah, the self-styled "resistance movement" which America and Britain consider a terrorist organisation, could effectively ...
Source: Google News

The vancomycin group of antibiotics and the fight against resistant bacteria -
DH Williams, B Bardsley - Angew Chem Int Ed, 1999 - doi.wiley.com
... and responsible for large numbers of deaths) of resistance to virtually ... group of
glyco- peptide antibiotics to the forefront of the fight against these bacteria ...

THE PROMISE OF RETINOIDS TO FIGHT AGAINST CANCER -
L Altucci, H Gronemeyer - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2001 - nature.com
... therapy is one of the rare success stories in the fight against cancer, but ... and
apoptogenic effects because they are active in retinoid-resistant cells and ...

New weapons in the fight against cancer -
I Ojima, PY Bounaud, RJ Bernacki - CHEMTECH, 1998 - pubs.acs.org
... New weapons in the fight against cancer. Some tumor cells are resistant to chemotherapy.
An understanding of the mechanism of this resistance has led to the ...

Insulin resistance and inflammation in an evolutionary perspective: the contribution of cytokine … -
JM Fern?ndez-Real, W Ricart - Diabetologia, 1999 - Springer
... with insulin resistance, body fat, and with mor- tality after chronic infections.
Thus, the TNF system seems to be designed for an effective fight against in- ...

Reexamining quinolone use in the intensive care unit: Use them right or lose the fight against -
MS Niederman - Critical Care Medicine, 2005 - ccmjournal.com
Page 1. Editorials Reexamining quinolone use in the intensive care unit:
Use them right or lose the fight against resistant bacteria* ...

[PDF] Polyanions- a lost chance in the fight against HIV and other virus diseases? -
M Luescher-Mattli - Antiviral Chemistry & Chemotherapy, 2000 - intmedpress.com
... between HIV-infected and normal CD4 T cells; and (iii) low induction of viral
resistance in cell ... Polyanions - a lost chance in the fight against HIV and ...
-

Ferroquine: A New Weapon in the Fight Against Malaria
C Biot - ingentaconnect.com
... Ferroquine: A New Weapon in the Fight Against Malaria ... extreme skill at adapting to
all drugs currently in use (like chloroquine (CQ)) and resistance to these ...

Vanadium: A Review of its Potential Role in the Fight Against Diabetes -
V Badmaev, S Prakash, M Majeed - The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 1999 - liebertonline.com
... Fight Against Diabetes ... The insulin-like properties of vanadium salts betes in cases
of insulin resistance and insulin have attracted much attention from the re ...

Antibiotic Resistance: Lessons for the Future -
RC Moellering Jr - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1998 - UChicago Press
... assistance in the fight against resistant bacterial infections. One should
not lose sight of the fact that vaccines continue to be a ...

Applications of telomerase research in the fight against cancer -
KE McKenzie, CB Umbricht, S Sukumar - Molecular Medicine Today, 1999 - Elsevier
... Applications of telomerase research in the fight against cancer Katherine
E. McKenzie, Christopher B. Umbricht and Saraswati Sukumar ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Arming the fight against resistant bacteria

April 27, 2007

by Jill Sakai

In 1928, Alexander Fleming opened the door to treating bacterial infections when he stumbled upon the first known antibiotic in a Penicillium mold growing in a discarded experiment.

Nearly eight decades later, chemist Helen Blackwell and her research team at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have devised a more deliberate method to tackle a newer bacterial conundrum - resistance to commonly used antibiotics. Early tests of their tool, called a "small-molecule macroarray," have already identified four promising new compounds with preliminary antibacterial activity comparable to that of some of the most potent antibiotics currently available.

Their findings are reported in the April 27 issue of the journal Chemistry and Biology.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

"Dr. Blackwell's research introduces a clever method for rapid screening and offers hope for the discovery of new classes of antibiotics. This is an area of critical importance as bacteria continue to develop resistance faster than scientists are able to develop new drugs to defeat them," says Kenneth M. Doxsee, program officer for the National Science Foundation's organic synthesis program.

Recent rapid development of bacterial resistance against antibiotics has brought bacterial infection back into the limelight as a serious concern, Blackwell says. Virulent strains like methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, often known as MRSA (pronounced "mir-sa") and once found only in hospitals, have become more common even as the available arsenal of useful drugs against them dwindles.

"Strains are emerging that are resistant to all known antibiotics," she says. "This is not a problem that's going to go away - and actually it's just going to get worse. There's a sense of urgency."

Such urgency is compounded by the speed at which some strains are capable of developing resistance, she adds. For example, bacteria resistant to one of the newest antibiotics, linezolid, appeared within one year of the drug's approval for use.

Since bacteria can adapt to new drugs so quickly, Blackwell says the best approach is to try to stay several steps ahead of the bugs. "No one agent is going to solve this problem," she says. "We need to continue to develop new molecules all the time."

To maximize their chances of finding new compounds with antibacterial activity, Blackwell's group, including graduate students Jennifer O'Neill and Joseph Stringer and former graduate student Matthew Bowman, designed a way to test large numbers of molecules quickly and efficiently.

They synthesize molecules directly on a flexible, paper-like sheet, building from the bottom up by adding ingredients one at a time to sections of the sheet. The finished array has dozens of compounds arranged in a grid of dots, each about the size of a pencil eraser.

They subject each array to a battery of tests, simultaneously testing the potency of each of the compounds against various strains of bacteria, including the dreaded MRSA.

In the end, relatively few pass muster - so far, about two percent - but the ability to synthesize and screen such large numbers of candidates should still allow them to identify large numbers of new possibilities. The whole process of building and testing each batch of 50 to 200 compounds takes less than two days.

The four promising compounds identified so far appear to kill bacteria, at least in a dish, as effectively as several antibiotics currently on the market, Blackwell says, but the most exciting thing about these compounds is that they belong to families of molecules with previously unknown antibiotic potential. By tapping into new chemical families, she says, they have found substances that probably fight bacteria in novel ways - suggesting they may stave off resistance a bit longer.

"These represent whole new classes of antibiotic agents," she says.

Also promising is their finding that, while their most potent compounds were able to kill several clinically relevant bacterial strains, the strongest activity was against MRSA and related strains, known as Gram-positive bacteria.

Finding that these compounds can kill bacteria is a good first step, but it is only one step of many on the long road to drug development, Blackwell says. For now, she will focus on understanding what makes the newly identified infection-fighters tick.

"How do they work?" she asks. "What features of compounds are necessary for activity, and can we improve them?"

Even subtle structural variations can mean the difference between a drug and a dud, but looking at large numbers of related molecules may help the group find clues about which features help battle the bugs. With such information, they can aim to actively tune activity through guided synthesis.

With the new method, "We can gather information on how to improve them fairly quickly," Blackwell says. "Hopefully we will find new approaches for anti-bacterial therapies."

The research is supported by the National Science Foundation, the Shaw Scientist Award Program and the Research Corporation.

 
 
 
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