Antisense oligomers directed to bacterial cell division and cell
cycle-encoding nucleic acids are capable of selectively modulating the
biological activity thereof, and are useful in treatment and prevention
of bacterial infection. The antisense oligomers are substantially
uncharged, and contain from 8 to 40 nucleotide subunits, including a
targeting nucleic acid sequence at least 10 nucleotides in length which
is effective to hybridize to (i) a bacterial tRNA or (ii) a target
sequence, containing a translational start codon, within a bacterial
nucleic acid which encodes a protein associated with cell division or the
cell cycle. Such proteins include zipA, sulA, secA, dicA, dicB, diCc,
dicF, ftsA, ftsl,ftsN, ftsK, ftsL, ftsQ, ftsw, ftsZ, murC, murD, murE,
murF, murg, minC, minD, minE, mraY, mraW, mraZ, seqA, ddlB, carbamate
kinase, D-ala D-ala ligase, topoisomerase, alkyl hydroperoxide reductase,
thioredoxin reductase, dihydrofolate reductase, and cell wall enzyme.