| Literature DB >> 23878798 |
Claudia Spampinato1, Darío Leonardi.
Abstract
The genus Candida includes about 200 different species, but only a few species are human opportunistic pathogens and cause infections when the host becomes debilitated or immunocompromised. Candida infections can be superficial or invasive. Superficial infections often affect the skin or mucous membranes and can be treated successfully with topical antifungal drugs. However, invasive fungal infections are often life-threatening, probably due to inefficient diagnostic methods and inappropriate initial antifungal therapies. Here, we briefly review our current knowledge of pathogenic species of the genus Candida and yeast infection causes and then focus on current antifungal drugs and resistance mechanisms. An overview of new therapeutic alternatives for the treatment of Candida infections is also provided.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23878798 PMCID: PMC3708393 DOI: 10.1155/2013/204237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Primary targets and mode of action of several antifungal agents.
Administration routes and pharmacokinetic parameters of representative antifungal agents belonging to the major families of compounds.
| Drug family | Drug | Adm. routea | Pharmacokinetic parameters | References | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral bioavailability (%) |
| AUCc mg·h/L | Protein binding (%) | Half time (h) | Elimination | ||||
| Azoles | Fluconazole | Oral | >90 | 0.7 | 400.0 | 10–12 | 27–31 | Urine | [ |
| Itraconazole | Oral | >55 | 1.1 | 29.2 | 99.8 | 21–64 | Hepatic | [ | |
| Voriconazole | Oral | >90 | 4.6 | 20.3 | 60.0 | 6 | Renal | [ | |
| Posaconazole | Oral | >98 | 7.8 | 17.0 | 99.0 | 15–35 | Feces | [ | |
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| Echinocandins | Caspofungin | IV | <5 | 9.5–12.1 | 93.5–100.5 | 96.0 | 10.6 | Urine | [ |
| Micafungin | IV | <5 | 7.1–10.9 | 59.9–111.3 | 99.8 | 11–17 | Feces | [ | |
| Anidulafungin | IV | <5 | 3.4–7.5 | 44.4–104.5 | 84.0 | 18.1–25.6 | Feces | [ | |
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| Polyenes | Amphotericin B | IV | <5 | 1.5–2.1 | 13–17 | >95 | 6.8–50 | Feces | [ |
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| Nucleoside analogues | Flucytosine | Oral | 76–89 | 80 | 62 | 4 | 3–6 | Renal | [ |
aAdm. route indicates administration route; fluconazole, itraconazole, and voriconazole can be administered by both intravenous and oral routes; IV: intravenous; b C max: maximal concentration; cAUC: area under the curve.
Resistance mechanisms of major systemic antifungal drugs. Antifungal resistance is based on different mechanisms, namely, (i) reduced drug intracellular accumulation, (ii) decreased target affinity/processivity for the drug, and (iii) counteraction of the drug effect.
| Antifungal class | Genetic basis for resistance | Functional basis for resistance |
|---|---|---|
| Azoles | Upregulation of | (i) Upregulation of drug transporters |
| Point mutations in | (ii) Decreased lanosterol 14- | |
| Upregulation of | (iii) Increased concentration of lanosterol 14- | |
| Point mutations in | (iii) Inactivation of C5 sterol desaturase leading to alterations in the ergosterol synthetic pathway | |
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| Echinocandins | Point mutations in | (ii) Decreased glucan synthase processivity for the drug |
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| Polyenes | Point mutations in | (iii) Decreased ergosterol content in cells |
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| Nucleoside analogues | Point mutations in | (i) Inactivation of cytosine permease affecting drug uptake |
| Point mutations in | (iii) Inactivation of cytosine deaminase leading to alterations in the metabolism of 5-fluorocytosine | |
| Point mutations in | (iii) Inactivation of uracil phosphoribosyl transferase leading to alterations in the metabolism of 5-fluorocytosine | |
Some natural products, synthetic agents, and polymeric materials with reported antifungal activities.
| General source | Specific source | Biological active molecules | Examples | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natural products | Plants | Essential oils; terpenoids; saponins; phenolic compounds; alkaloids; peptides; proteins | Steroidal saponins, sesquiterpenoids | [ |
| Marine organisms | Anthracycline-related compounds; lipopeptides; pentacyclic compounds | Xestodecalactone B, seragikinone A | [ | |
| Endophytic fungi | Secondary metabolites; peptides; pyrones | cryptocandin, pestalopyrone | [ | |
| Microorganisms of terrestrial environment | Lipopeptides; terpenoids | Echinocandins, enfumafungin | [ | |
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| Synthetic agents | Organically synthesized or derived compounds | Compounds based on N,N-dimethylbiguanide complexes | Me (N,N-dimethylbiguanide)2(CH3COO)2· | [ |
| Derived compounds from traditional antifungal structures | Imidazole derivatives, amine-derived bis-azoles | [ | ||
| Synthetic derived peptides | Lactoferrin-derived peptides | [ | ||
| Derived compounds from natural products | Micafungin sodium, anidulafungin, caspofungin acetate, pneumocandin, and enfumafungin derivatives | [ | ||
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| Polymeric materials | Polymeric materials | Polymers with quaternary nitrogen atoms | Polymers containing aromatic or heterocyclic structures | [ |
| Cationic conjugated polyelectrolytes | [ | |||
| Polymers with quaternary nitrogen atoms within the main chain. | [ | |||
| Block copolymers containing quaternary ammonium salt | [ | |||
| Synthetic peptides, synthetic dendrimeric peptides | [ | |||
| Antifungal peptides mimics | Arylamide and phenylene ethynylene backbone polymers | [ | ||
| Polynorbornene derivatives | [ | |||
| Polymethacrylate and polymethacrylamide platforms containing hydrophobic and cationic side chains | [ | |||
| Polymers with superficial activity | Fluorine-containing polymers | [ | ||
| Polymers containing different contents of halogens | Chlorine-containing phenyl methacrylate polymers | [ | ||
| Polymeric N-halamines | [ | |||
| Chelates | Polymer-copper(II)-bipyridyl complex | [ | ||
| N-vinylimidazole copolymerized with phenacyl methacrylate | [ | |||
| Imidazole derivative polymers | 2-[(5-methylisoxazol-3-yl)amino]-2-oxo-ethyl methacrylate and ethyl methacrylate | [ | ||
| Polymers loaded with antifungal compounds | Organic compounds | [ | ||
| Inorganic compounds | [ | |||
Figure 2Chemical structures of three agents with actual promise: E1210 (a), albaconazole (b), and isavuconazole (c).
Pharmacokinetic parameters of some lead drugs.
| Drug | Available forms | Experimental organisms | Pharmacokinetic parameters | References | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral bioavailability (%) |
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| Protein binding (%) | Half time (h) | Elimination | ||||
| E1210 | Oral/IVa | Mice | 57.5 | 0.11 | 0.5 | High | 2.2 | nrd | [ |
| Albaconazole | Oral | Healthy human volunteers | nrd | 5–80 | 2–4 | 98 | 30–56 | Feces | [ |
| Isavuconazonium | Oral | Healthy human volunteers | Very high | 1.03 | 0.75–1 | 98 | 56–77 | Feces | [ |
| Isavuconazole | IVa | Healthy human volunteers | nrd | 1.45 | 1.3–5 | 98 | 76–104 | Feces | [ |
aIV: intravenous; b C max: maximal concentration; c t max: time to reach maximal plasma concentrations after oral administration; dnr: not reported.