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Pathway Description
Tetracycline Action Pathway
Homo sapiens
Drug Action Pathway
Tetracycline is a broad-use antibiotic that is produced by Streptomyces and used to treat bacterial infections such as rocky mountain spotted fever, typhus fever and tick fevers. it is most effectively administered orally but can also be administered via intramuscular injection. It has a half-life of 6-12 hours and is concentrated by the liver and excreted through the urine and feces. Tetracycline can passively transport itself through the bacterial membrane and goes on to inhibit bacterial growth. It stops bacterial growth by binding to the 30S subunits that inhibit the transfer of amino-acyl tRNA to site A of the ribosome. Thus halting protein synthesis and stopping bacterial growth.
References
Tetracycline Pathway References
Griffin MO, Fricovsky E, Ceballos G, Villarreal F: Tetracyclines: a pleitropic family of compounds with promising therapeutic properties. Review of the literature. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2010 Sep;299(3):C539-48. doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.00047.2010. Epub 2010 Jun 30.
Pubmed: 20592239
National Center for Biotechnology Information (2020). PubChem Compound Summary for CID 54675776, Tetracycline. Retrieved December 22, 2020 from https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Tetracycline.
Chopra I, Roberts M: Tetracycline antibiotics: mode of action, applications, molecular biology, and epidemiology of bacterial resistance. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 2001 Jun;65(2):232-60 ; second page, table of contents. doi: 10.1128/MMBR.65.2.232-260.2001.
Pubmed: 11381101
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