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Bad News to Bad Bugs: Northern Antibiotics Develops Novel Polymyxins With Reduced Toxicity

 
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HELSINKI, July 1, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ ----The emergence of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria has necessitated the use of polymyxins as the agents of last resort despite their known nephrotoxicity. Now Northern Antibiotics Ltd, a Finnish biotech company, has developed novel polymyxin derivatives which in early preclinical studies show signs of lower nephrotoxicity.

The derivatives contain three positive charges only, while polymyxin B and colistin have five. They bind to the isolated brush-border membrane of rat kidney at an affinity which is only 1/5-1/7 of that for polymyxin B. In vivo rat studies also show remarkable differences in parameters that are considered to indicate early kidney damage, such as serum urea nitrogen, albuminuria and cylindrouria.

The derivatives fall in to two groups that differ in their mode of action. The lead compound of the first group, NAB 7061, sensitizes enteric bacteria to other antibiotics. For example, it reduces the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of clarithromycin for ESBL-producing strains of Escherichia coli by a factor of 250-750. NAB 739, the lead compound of the second series, acts directly against enteric bacteria. For E. coli (including ESBL-producing strains) the MIC90 is identical to that of polymyxin B. While NAB 739 is already alone highly active against multidrug-resistant strains of Acinetobacter baumannii, it also at very low subinhibitory concentrations sensitizes this bacterium to other antibiotics. A paper entitled "Novel polymyxin derivatives carrying only three positive charges are effective antibacterial agents" was published ahead of print on June 30, 2008 (Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., doi:10.1128/AAC.00405-08).

"The efficacy of both lead compounds has been verified using an experimental E. coli peritonitis model in mice, and we are now talking to potential partners to further develop and eventually commercialize these two lines of novel compounds," says Professor Martti Vaara, CEO and co-founder of Northern Antibiotics Ltd.

"The need for well-tolerated antibiotics that are active against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria is urgent. Enteric bacteria are responsible for more than 80% of all the hospital infections caused by Gram-negative bacteria, and now they are rapidly becoming resistant to most antibiotics that are currently used to treat them. Plasmid-mediated carbapenemases, probably transferred from Klebsiella pneumoniae, have now been found in E. coli, the clinically most important species of Gram-negative enteric bacteria. Also plasmid-mediated methylases that cause resistance to all aminoglycosides have been encountered. Finally and quite alarmingly, a single genetic element conferring transferable resistance to carbapenems, aminoglycosides and fluoroquinolones has been reported in K. pneumoniae. One does not need to be very smart to guess what follows when these plasmids become more common and the resulting extremely multidrug-resistant strains start to spread."

About Northern Antibiotics Ltd.

Founded in 2003 and headquartered in Helsinki, Finland, Northern Antibiotics Ltd is engaged in the discovery and development of novel antibiotics against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. For more information, visit http://www.northernantibiotics.com.

 Contact: Dr. Barry Mason Business Development Consultant Email: barry.mason@northernantibiotics.com Phone: +44(0)1625-858396
   Mobile: +44(0)7713-261356 

SOURCE Northern Antibiotics Ltd

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Contango

No, it's not a dance craze. Contago is a condition of supply and demand, essentially a fancy word to say that prices for items, typically commodities, are cheaper now than they would be at some point down the line.

Anything that¿s sold in the futures market can be in a case of contango. Futures are exactly that: a contract to buy an item or asset at a price in the future. This is the case with oil, with traders buying and selling contracts to acquire a barrel of oil in months down the line. When a market is in contango, spot prices, or the price of a commodity if you were to buy it right now, are lower than forward prices.

Why is that important? Well, it usually tells you the supply of a given commodity is plentiful (since, according to Economics 101, a large supply usually leads to cheap prices).

Incidentally, if you think contango is a mouthful, its opposite condition is known by the equally tongue-tying term backwardation.