| Literature DB >> 19130268 |
Marvin J Miller1, Helen Zhu, Yanping Xu, Chunrui Wu, Andrew J Walz, Anne Vergne, John M Roosenberg, Garrett Moraski, Albert A Minnick, Julia McKee-Dolence, Jingdan Hu, Kelley Fennell, E Kurt Dolence, Li Dong, Scott Franzblau, Francois Malouin, Ute Möllmann.
Abstract
Pathogenic microbes rapidly develop resistance to antibiotics. To keep ahead in the "microbial war", extensive interdisciplinary research is needed. A primary cause of drug resistance is the overuse of antibiotics that can result in alteration of microbial permeability, alteration of drug target binding sites, induction of enzymes that destroy antibiotics (ie., beta-lactamase) and even induction of efflux mechanisms. A combination of chemical syntheses, microbiological and biochemical studies demonstrate that the known critical dependence of iron assimilation by microbes for growth and virulence can be exploited for the development of new approaches to antibiotic therapy. Iron recognition and active transport relies on the biosyntheses and use of microbe-selective iron-chelating compounds called siderophores. Our studies, and those of others, demonstrate that siderophores and analogs can be used for iron transport-mediated drug delivery ("Trojan Horse" antibiotics) and induction of iron limitation/starvation (Development of new agents to block iron assimilation). Recent extensions of the use of siderophores for the development of novel potent and selective anticancer agents are also described.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19130268 PMCID: PMC4066965 DOI: 10.1007/s10534-008-9185-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biometals ISSN: 0966-0844 Impact factor: 2.949