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Biology-Related Homework Help Nursing and Clinical Topic started by: colleen on Apr 18, 2012



Title: Discuss the cellular factors that might make a drug's spectrum of action narrow
Post by: colleen on Apr 18, 2012
Discuss the cellular factors that might make a drug's spectrum of action narrow rather than broad.


Title: Re: Discuss the cellular factors that might make a drug's spectrum of action narrow
Post by: lewis on Apr 19, 2012
When a drug is labeled "narrow-spectrum," meaning that it has activity against only a limited number of microbes, generally the reason is that many microbes possess some form of natural resistance against the drug. For example, many drugs work better against Gram-positive organisms than Gram-negative ones because Gram-negative cells possess an outer membrane that does not allow these drugs to enter the cell as readily as they enter Gram-positive cells. Other cellular factors that can have an effect on the spectrum of action of a particular drug include the presence of R-plasmids in the cell that carries resistance genes, the presence of altered cytoplasmic membrane or cell wall proteins that prevent the passage of some types of drugs, and alterations in a cell's metabolic pathways, which can make the cell more resistant to certain types of drugs.

Other antimicrobials have a narrow spectrum of action because they target a metabolic or structural feature unique to a single pathogen or small group of pathogens. One example of this type of narrow-spectrum antimicrobial is antisense RNA, which complements a specific nucleotide sequence that may be present in only one pathogen.