Scientists from the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN) at UCL are
using a novel nanomechanical approach to investigate the workings of
vancomycin, one of the few antibiotics that can be used to combat
increasingly resistant infections such as MRSA. The researchers, led by
Dr Rachel McKendry and Professor Gabriel Aeppli, developed
ultra-sensitive probes capable of providing new insight into how
antibiotics work, paving the way for the development of more effective
new drugs.
During the study Dr McKendry, Joseph Ndieyira, Moyu Watari and
coworkers used cantilever arrays – tiny levers no wider than a human
hair – to examine the process which ordinarily takes place in the body
when vancomycin binds itself to the surface of the bacteria. They
coated the cantilever array with mucopeptides from bacterial cell walls
and found that as the antibiotic attaches itself, it generates a
surface stress on the bacteria which can be detected by a tiny bending
of the levers. The team suggests that this stress contributes to the
disruption of the cell walls and the breakdown of the bacteria.
The interdisciplinary team went on to compare how vancomycin
interacts with both non-resistant and resistant strains of bacteria.
The 'superbugs' are resistant to antibiotics because of a simple
mutation which deletes a single hydrogen bond from the structure of
their cell walls. This small change makes it approximately 1,000 times
harder for the antibiotic to attach itself to the bug, leaving it much
less able to disrupt the cells' structure, and therefore
therapeutically ineffective.
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