| Literature DB >> 30110923 |
Olga Maria Lage1,2, María C Ramos3, Rita Calisto4,5, Eduarda Almeida6,7, Vitor Vasconcelos8,9, Francisca Vicente10.
Abstract
The increase of many deadly diseases like infections by multidrug-resistant bacteria implies re-inventing the wheel on drug discovery. A better comprehension of the metabolisms and regulation of diseases, the increase in knowledge based on the study of disease-born microorganisms' genomes, the development of more representative disease models and improvement of techniques, technologies, and computation applied to biology are advances that will foster drug discovery in upcoming years. In this paper, several aspects of current methodologies for drug discovery of antibacterial and antifungals, anti-tropical diseases, antibiofilm and antiquorum sensing, anticancer and neuroprotectors are considered. For drug discovery, two different complementary approaches can be applied: classical pharmacology, also known as phenotypic drug discovery, which is the historical basis of drug discovery, and reverse pharmacology, also designated target-based drug discovery. Screening methods based on phenotypic drug discovery have been used to discover new natural products mainly from terrestrial origin. Examples of the discovery of marine natural products are provided. A section on future trends provides a comprehensive overview on recent advances that will foster the pharmaceutical industry.Entities:
Keywords: anti-infectives; anticancer; drug discovery future trends; marine natural products; neuroprotectors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30110923 PMCID: PMC6117650 DOI: 10.3390/md16080279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Different screening methods and their respective advantages and disadvantages.
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Simple, low cost High performance |
Only qualitative results Not all fastidious bacteria can be tested |
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Useful for evaluating antifungal effects Quantitative and qualitative results |
Poor performance |
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Simple, low cost Suitable for bioactivity-guided fractionation |
Poor efficiency for water-insoluble compounds |
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Easy interpretation Quantitative results, suitable for MIC calculation Appropriated for fastidious or non-fastidious bacteria, yeast and filamentous fungi |
Labor-intensive and time consuming Poor efficiency for water-insoluble compounds |
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Suitable for determining synergism or antagonism between bactericidal or fungicidal drugs Useful for determining the time- and concentration-dependent antimicrobial effect |
Interlaboratory variability Labor-intensive and time consuming |
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Fast, especially for antimycobacterial Quantitative results Suitable for testing in vivo |
Expensive technique Requires specialized equipment |
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Provide more information: detect antimicrobial resistance and target cell damage Fast |
Requires specialized equipment |
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Useful to assess the total biomass within a biofilm Highly accurate for large amounts of biofilm |
Indirect measurement High detection limit No differentiation between dead and live cells |
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Direct measurement of biofilms 3D representation of biofilms |
Fluorophores are required Reporter molecules are limited Fluorophores interference with biofilm Auto-fluorescence might mask fluorophores’ signal |
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Simple, low cost Efficient |
Qualitative results only Requires specific indicator strains |
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Simple, low cost Quantitative results |
Requires specific indicator strains Indirect measurement |
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Simple, low cost Efficient |
Qualitative results Requires specific indicator mutated strains |
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High performance assays (HTS) |
Very few fully validated drug targets Additional screening is needed for avoiding off-target effects |
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High performance assays (HTS) and high-content imaging (HCS) in some parasite stages |
Complex life cycles challenging to reproduce in laboratory Effectiveness in one parasitic stage does not guarantee the in vivo effect |
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High performance assays (HTS) |
Very few fully validated drug targets Additional screening is needed for avoiding off-target effects |
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Use of High-content imaging (HCS) in larvae |
Few screening campaigns to date Complex life cycles challenging to reproduce in laboratory Effectiveness in one parasitic stage does not guarantee the in vivo effect |
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High performance assays (HTS) |
Very few fully validated drug targets Additional screening is needed for avoiding off-target effects |
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Different methods developed for the different stages of life cycle: asexual erythrocytic-stage, liver stage, gametocyte Improvement in more physiologic in vitro human liver platforms High-content imaging techniques |
Complex life cycles challenging to reproduce in laboratory Effectiveness in one parasitic stage does not guarantee the in vivo effect |
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Less expensive than other anticancer screening methods Quantitative results that are independent of the dye enzymatic conversion |
Indirect measurement |
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Inexpensive |
Indirect measurement Time consuming User biased Low precision |
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Suitable for HTS (MTT assays) Not cytotoxic for cells (Resazurin assay) High sensitivity (ATP content assay) Quantitative results |
Indirect measurement Labor-intensive and time consuming |
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Can be used in multiplex High sensitivity Not toxic Quantitative results |
Indirect measurement |
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Highly precise results Quantitative results |
Time consuming Only applicable to tumour cells that grow in culture |
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Highly accurate and reliable Suitable for HTS Quantitative results |
Use of radioactive labels Time-consuming protocol |
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Allows mimics in vitro some features of neurodegenerative diseases Suitable for the combination of target-based and phenotypic screening High performance assays (HTS) and high-content imaging (HCS) |
Too much simplification of the diseases |
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Allows mimics in vitro some features of neurodegenerative diseases Suitable for the combination of target-based and phenotypic screening High performance assays (HTS) and high-content imaging (HCS) |
Too much simplification of the diseases |
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More physiologic cellular models High-content imaging (HCS) |
Challenging techniques and specialized equipment |