Abstract

Ritipenem is highly bacteriolytic against Haemophilus influenzae. Bacterial lysis was shown after treatments with ritipenem and cefsulodin at their MICs and after treatments with fropenem and cefdinir at four times their MICs, indicated by decreases in the culture turbidities and by morphological changes of the destroyed cells. These beta-lactams were preferentially bound to penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 1b. Ritipenem, fropenem, and cefsulodin exhibited poor affinities to PBPs 3a and 3b, but cefdinir showed high affinities to these PBPs. Microscopic examinations revealed that selective PBP 3 inhibitors, such as aztreonam and cefotaxime, inhibited lysis induced by ritipenem. These results suggest that the preferential inactivation of PBP 1b could be essential to induce the lysis of H. influenzae cells and that binding to PBPs 3a and 3b may interfere with lysis.

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