Literature DB >> 24059464

Calcium antagonists: a ready prescription for treating infectious diseases?

Kevin B Clark1, Edward M Eisenstein, Scott E Krahl.   

Abstract

Emergence of new and medically resistant pathogenic microbes continues to escalate toward worldwide public health, wild habitat, and commercial crop and livestock catastrophes. Attempts at solving this problem with sophisticated modern biotechnologies, such as smart vaccines and microbicidal and microbistatic drugs that precisely target parasitic bacteria, fungi, and protozoa, remain promising without major clinical and industrial successes. However, discovery of a more immediate, broad spectrum prophylaxis beyond conventional epidemiological approaches might take no longer than the time required to fill a prescription at your neighborhood pharmacy. Findings from a growing body of research suggest calcium antagonists, long approved and marketed for various human cardiovascular and neurological indications, may produce safe, efficacious antimicrobial effects. As a general category of drugs, calcium antagonists include compounds that disrupt passage of Ca(2+) molecules across cell membranes and walls, sequestration and mobilization of free intracellular Ca(2+), and downstream binding proteins and sensors of Ca(2+)-dependent regulatory pathways important for proper cell function. Administration of calcium antagonists alone at current therapeutically relevant doses and schedules, or with synergistic compounds and additional antimicrobial medications, figures to enhance host immunoprotection by directly altering pathogen infection sequences, life cycles, homeostasis, antibiotic tolerances, and numerous other infective, survival, and reproductive processes. Short of being miracle drugs, calcium antagonists are welcome old drugs with new tricks capable of controlling some of the most virulent and pervasive global infectious diseases of plants, animals, and humans, including Chagas' disease, malaria, and tuberculosis.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24059464     DOI: 10.2174/15680266113136660161

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Top Med Chem        ISSN: 1568-0266            Impact factor:   3.295


  2 in total

1.  Basis for a neuronal version of Grover's quantum algorithm.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Front Mol Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 5.639

2.  Biotic activity of Ca(2+)-modulating non-traditional antimicrobial and -viral agents.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2013-12-12       Impact factor: 5.640

  2 in total

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