Manuka GhoshYun‐Ming LinPatricia A. MillerUte MöllmannBill BoggessMarvin J. Miller
Development of resistance to antibiotics is a major medical problem. One approach to extending the utility of our limited antibiotic arsenal is to repurpose antibiotics by altering their bacterial selectivity. Many antibiotics that are used to treat infections caused by Gram-positive bacteria might be made effective against Gram-negative bacterial infections, if they could circumvent permeability barriers and antibiotic deactivation processes associated with Gram-negative bacteria. Herein, we report that covalent attachment of the normally Gram-positive-only antibiotic, daptomycin, with iron sequestering siderophore mimetics that are recognized by Gram-negative bacteria, provides conjugates that are active against virulent strains of Acinetobacter baumannii, including carbapenemase and cephalosporinase producers. The result is the generation of a new set of antibiotics designed to target bacterial infections that have been designated as being of dire concern.
Manuka Ghosh (3026628)Yun-Ming Lin (2505934)Patricia A. Miller (1318251)Ute Möllmann (1318254)William C. Boggess (2469424)Marvin J. Miller (398964)
Il Kwon BaeSeok Hoon JeongKyungwon Lee
Ramulu ParupalliRavikumar AkunuriGrace KaulAbdul AkhirDeepanshi SaxenaShaik Mahammad GhouseVenkata Madhavi YaddanapudiSidharth ChopraSrinivas Nanduri
Siham MahgoubJimi AhmedAaron E. Glatt
Karyne RangelDaniela BetzlerCardoso GomesGabrielle Limeira GenteluciMaria José de SouzaMaria Helena Simões Villas Bôas