| Literature DB >> 25914685 |
Adrián Rangel-Vega1, Lawrence R Bernstein2, Edna Ayerim Mandujano-Tinoco3, Silvia Julieta García-Contreras4, Rodolfo García-Contreras1.
Abstract
Bacterial infection remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, and the options for treating such infections are decreasing, due the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The pharmaceutical industry has produced few new types of antibiotics in more than a decade. Researchers are taking several approaches toward developing new classes of antibiotics, including (1) focusing on new targets and processes, such as bacterial cell-cell communication that upregulates virulence; (2) designing inhibitors of bacterial resistance, such as blockers of multidrug efflux pumps; and (3) using alternative antimicrobials such as bacteriophages. In addition, the strategy of finding new uses for existing drugs is beginning to produce results: antibacterial properties have been discovered for existing anticancer, antifungal, anthelmintic, and anti-inflammatory drugs. In this review, we discuss the antimicrobial properties of gallium compounds, 5-fluorouracil, ciclopirox, diflunisal, and some other FDA-approved drugs and argue that their repurposing for the treatment of bacterial infections, including those that are multidrug resistant, is a feasible strategy.Entities:
Keywords: 5-fluorouracil; bacterial infections; ciclopirox; diflunisal; drug repurposing; gallium
Year: 2015 PMID: 25914685 PMCID: PMC4391038 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
New strategies to combat bacterial infections.
| Strategy | Examples | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Develop new antibiotics | Daptomycin Novel oxazolidinone antibacterial agents | Optimized for inhibiting bacterial growth | Only two new clasess of antibiotics had been developed in the past 20 years Not a priority for the pharmaceutical companies Scaffolds are scarce |
| Develop new types of antimicrobials | Antimicrobial peptides Bacteriophages | New targets, new action mechanisms | Antimicrobial peptides: expensive, toxic, and subject to proteolysis Bacteriophages: attacked by the immune system, prone to develop resistance |
| Develop new anti-virulence drugs | Quorum sensing inhibitors Inhibitors of bacterial secretion systems | Targeting virulence instead of growth potentially could decrease resistance | Quorum sensing inhibitors: resistance mechanisms had been found Not effective against some clinical strains |
| Target resistance mechanisms | Multidrug efflux pumps inhibitors | Will allow the re-utilization of already non-effective antibiotics | Bacteria usually have several simultaneous drug resistance mechanisms |
| Drug repurposing for antibacterial and anti-virulence drugs | Ga containing compounds 5-FU Ciclopirox Diflunisal Statins Pentetic acid | Avoiding the high costs and long development times of novel antimicrobials Known pharmacological properties, known side effects, doses, interactions with other drugs, etc New targets, new action mechanisms Ample repertoire, high versatility Effective against several recalcitrant pathogens, including MDR. | Not optimized for antibacterial or antivirulence effects Ga containing compounds: their broad spectrum activity could be counterproductive damaging healthy host tissues, particularly fast growing cells with high iron acquisition 5-FU: high toxicity |
Antibacterial activities of the reviewed drugs.
| Drug | Therapeutic use | Antibacterial activity | Antibacterial activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gallium compounds | Gallium nitrate: treatment of hypercalcemia of malignancy | Growth inhibition of several recalcitrant bacterial pathogens (including clinical isolates) such as: Gram (-) | Effective against syphilis | |
| 5-Florouracil | Anticancer drug Treatment of actinic keratosis and Bowen's disease | Growth inhibition of Gram (+) and (-) bacterial species Inhibition of biofilm formation Repression of QS | Successful in clinical trials in humans, as external coating of central venous catheters | |
| Ciclopirox | Antifungal | Bacteriostatic and bactericide activity, depending on concentration used, in laboratory and clinical isolates | Not yet tested | |
| 5-fluorocytosine | Antifungal | Inhibition of virulence factor production by | Suppresses | |
| Azithromycin | Antibiotic | Inhibition of QS systems of | Clinical evidence and clinical trials demonstrate efficacy in the treatment of chronic pulmonary infections of | |
| Niclosamide | Antihelmintic | Inhibition of QS systems of | Reduction of | |
| Diflunisal | Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory | Potent virulence inhibitor for the USA300 strain of methicillin-resistant | Not yet tested | |
| Statins | Lower plasma cholesterol levels | Reduction of virulence factor production of | Inhibition of | |
| Pentetic acid | Preparation of radiopharmaceuticals treatment of iron-storage disease and poisoning from heavy metals | Reduction of virulence factor production of | Effective to alleviate mice airway infections | |
| Terfenadine | Antihistamine | Inhibit growth of several pathogenic bacteria, including | Not yet tested | |
| Zafirlukast | Treatment of asthma | Antimycobacterial | Not yet tested |