The thermophilic fermentation of cellulosic material is generally regarded-as a result of the combined action of several species of bacteria, some of which attack the cellulose and others the sugars formed from the breakdown of the cellulose. Much effort has been spent on attempts to isolate the cellulose fermenters but very little attention has been paid to the associated sugar-fermenting organisms. Snieszko and Kimball (1933) isolated and described two types of such bacteria but gave no chemical data on the fermentation products formed. It, therefore, seemed desirable to make such a study. EXPERIMENTAL Medium and cultures The following medium was used in most of the experiments: Medium 1 NaNHiHPO4........
Overexpression of efflux pumps is an important mechanism of bacterial resistance that results in the extrusion of antimicrobial agents outside the bacterial cell. Inhibition of such pumps appears to be a promising strategy that could restore the potency of existing antibiotics. The NorA efflux pump of Staphylococcus aureus confers resistance to a wide range of unrelated substrates, such as hydrophilic fluoroquinolones, leading to a multidrug-resistance phenotype. In this work, approximately 150 heterocyclic boronic species were evaluated for their activity against susceptible and resistant strains of S. aureus. Twenty-four hit compounds, although inactive when tested alone, were found to potentiate ciprofloxacin activity by a 4-fold increase at concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 8 μg/mL against S. aureus 1199B, which overexpresses NorA. Boron-free analogues showed no biological activity, thus revealing that the boron atom is crucial for biological activity. This work describes the first reported efflux pump inhibitory activity of boronic acid derivatives.
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