gentamicin
When a bacterial cell is placed in a 10% NaCl solution with penicillin, the high salt concentration will cause water to leave the cell, leading to dehydration and shrinkage of the cell. The penicillin will inhibit the synthesis of the bacterial cell wall, making it more susceptible to the osmotic stress induced by the high salt concentration, ultimately leading to cell death.
Carbenicillin is a beta-lactam antibiotic that inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis by interfering with the enzymes responsible for cross-linking peptidoglycan chains in the cell wall. This leads to cell wall weakening and eventual lysis of the bacteria.
Pyrazinamide is considered bactericidal against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It works by disrupting the mycolic acid synthesis in the cell wall, leading to cell death.
Cyanide molecules inhibit the body's ability to use oxygen, interfering with cellular respiration and leading to a lack of energy production in cells. This can result in severe toxicity and even death if not treated promptly.
* Kingdom Animalia, Phylum prokaryotae. i disagree, its kingdon prokaryote
Penicillin inhibits transpeptidase, and enzyme that is necessary for bacterial cell wall synthesis. If a cell is not actively multiplying, then no cell wall synthesis is occurring and, therefore, penicillin does not inhibit the bacteria.
Antifungals are usually classified as either azoles, polyenes, echinocandins, or allylamines based on their mechanism of action. These drugs work by disrupting the fungal cell membrane or interfering with fungal cell wall synthesis to inhibit fungal growth.
Antibiotics that do not interfere with cell wall synthesis include fluoroquinolones, macrolides, tetracyclines, and sulfonamides. These antibiotics work by targeting different aspects of bacterial cell function, such as protein synthesis or nucleic acid replication.
protein is used for synthesis of many cell organelli and cell wall
1- Cell Wall Synthesis Inhibitors:Bacteria contain peptidoglycan that is highly essential in maintaining the cell wall structure. Cell wall synthesis inhibitors such as beta-lactams, cephalosporins and glycopeptides block the ability of microorganisms to synthesize their cell wall by inhibiting the synthesis of peptidoglycan.2- Interfering with Protein Synthesis:These classes of antibiotics inhibit the protein synthesis machinery in the cell. Some examples include tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, aminoglycosides and macrolides.3- Cell Membrane Inhibitors:Antibiotics such as polymyxins disrupt the integrity and structure of cell membranes, thereby killing them. These set of antibiotics are mostly effective on gram negative bacteria because these are the bacteria that contain a definite cell membrane.4- Effect on Nucleic Acids:DNA and RNA are extremely essential nucleic acids present in every living cell. Antibiotics such as quinolones and rifamycins bind to the proteins that are required for the processing of DNA and RNA, thus blocking their synthesis and thereby affecting the growth of the cells.5- Competitive Inhibitors:Also referred to as anti-metabolites or growth factor analogs, these are antibiotics that competitively inhibit the important metabolic pathways occurring inside the bacterial cell. Important ones in this class are sulfonamides such as Gantrisin and Trimethoprim.
No- because penicillin inhibits cell wall synthesis and Mycoplasmas don't have a cell wall.
The bactericidal activity of ceftriaxone results from inhibition of bacterial cell wall synthesis This antimicrobial agent Inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis by binding to one or more of the penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) which in turn inhibits the final transpeptidation step of peptidoglycan synthesis in bacterial cell walls, thus inhibiting cell wall biosynthesis. Bacteria eventually lyse due to ongoing activity of cell wall autolytic enzymes (autolysins and murein hydrolases) while cell wall assembly is arrested.
An antibiotic is a compound that can inhibit the growth and reproduction of bacteria by targeting specific processes within the bacterial cell. Antibiotics work by disrupting essential functions such as cell wall synthesis, protein synthesis, or DNA replication, ultimately leading to bacterial death.
Bacteriostatic methods of action inhibit bacterial growth and reproduction without killing them. Examples include inhibiting protein synthesis, DNA replication, or disrupting cell wall synthesis in bacteria. Antibiotics like tetracycline and macrolides work through bacteriostatic mechanisms.
Without the cell wall, the bacteria will be susceptible to destruction by chemicals outside the plasma membrane (which is just inside the cell wall of bacteria), and it will not be able to survive.
Mycoplasma is a genus of bacteria which lack a cell wall.[1] Without a cell wall, they are unaffected by many common antibiotics such as penicillin or other beta-lactam antibiotics that target cell wall synthesis. They can be parasitic or saprotrophic. Several species are pathogenic in humans, including M. pneumoniae, which is an important cause of atypical pneumonia and other respiratory disorders, and M. genitalium, which is believed to be involved in pelvic inflammatory diseases.
Second-generation cephalosporins. Method of action: inhibit cell wall systhesis