Publications by authors named "Aliyah B Rao"

Antibiotic resistance has been a growing public health crisis since the 1980s. Therefore, it is essential not only to continue to develop novel antibiotics but also to develop new methods for overcoming resistance mechanisms in pathogenic bacteria so antibiotics can be reactivated towards these resistant strains. One common cause of antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria is reduced permeability of the tightly packed, negatively charged lipopolysaccharide outer membrane (OM), which dramatically reduces or even prevents antibiotic accumulation within the cell.

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New antibiotics with unique biological targets are desperately needed to combat the growing number of resistant bacterial pathogens. ATP synthase, a critical protein found in all life, has recently become a target of interest for antibiotic development due to the success of the anti-tuberculosis drug bedaquiline, and while many groups have worked on developing drugs to target bacterial ATP synthase, few have been successful at inhibiting (PA) ATP synthase specifically. PA is one of the leading causes of resistant nosocomial infections across the world and is extremely challenging to treat due to its various antibiotic resistance mechanisms for most commonly used antibiotics.

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