Affiliation:
1. Public Health Research Institute, New York, New York 10016
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Antibacterial activities of gatifloxacin (AM1155), a new C-8-methoxy fluoroquinolone, and two structurally related compounds, AM1121 and ciprofloxacin, were studied with an isogenic set of ten quinolone-resistant,
gyrA
(gyrase) mutants of
Escherichia coli
. To compare the effect of each mutation on resistance, the mutant responses were normalized to those of wild-type cells. Alleles exhibiting the most resistance to growth inhibition mapped in α-helix 4, which is thought to lie on a GyrA dimer surface that interacts with DNA. The C-8-methoxy group lowered the resistance due to these mutations more than it lowered resistance arising from several
gyrA
alleles located outside α-helix 4. These data are consistent with α-helix 4 being a distinct portion of the quinolone-binding site of GyrA. A helix change to proline behaved more like nonhelix alleles, indicating that helix perturbation differs from the other changes at helix residues. Addition of a
parC
(topoisomerase IV) resistance allele revealed that the C-8-methoxy group also facilitated attack of topoisomerase IV. When lethal effects were measured at a constant multiple of the minimum inhibitory concentration for each fluoroquinolone to normalize for differences in bacteriostatic action, gatifloxacin was more potent than the C-8-H compounds, both in the presence and absence of protein synthesis (an exception was observed when alanine was substituted for aspartic acid at position 82). Collectively, these data show that the C-8-methoxy group contributes to the enhanced activity of gatifloxacin against resistant gyrase and wild-type topoisomerase IV.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
85 articles.
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