Gentamicin
Aminoglycoside antibiotic capable of translational readthrough
General information
Gentamicin is a broad-spectrum aminoglycoside antibiotic made from Micromonospora purpurea. It was approved for medical use in 1964 and is used to treat several types of bacterial infections, including bone infections, endocarditis, pelvic inflammatory disease, meningitis, pneumonia, urinary tract infections, and sepsis. In relation to cystic fibrosis, our AIM tool found the data that gentamicin can help nonsense CFTR mutations, such as W1282X, G542X, R553X, and Y122X, by suppressing their premature termination signals, which leads to the expression of full-length CFTR protein at the cell membrane.
Gentamicin on PubChem
Gentamicin on DrugBank
Gentamicin on Wikipedia
Synonyms
gentamicin sulfate
Marketed as
N/A
Dietary sources
N/A
Structure image not available
C21H43N5O7
Drug-Mutation Relation
results for W1282X / R792X
See all data on GentamicinTreats
| Mutation | Link | Tested on | Impact factor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| W1282X | Suppression of CFTR premature termination codons and rescue of CFTR protein and function by the synthetic aminoglycoside NB54. | human cell cultures | 4.67 | Less effective than NB54, but more effective than paromomycin or NB30. More toxic than NB54 or NB30. |
| W1282X | Suppression of a CFTR premature stop mutation in a bronchial epithelial cell line. | human cell cultures | 28.14 | |
| W1282X/W1282X | Gentamicin-Induced Correction of CFTR Function in Patients with Cystic Fibrosis and CFTR Stop Mutations | humans | 34.83 |
Does not treat
| Mutation | Link | Tested on | Impact factor | Notes |
|---|