| Literature DB >> 30832456 |
Abstract
The emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant pathogens is a major public health issue, which requires global action of an intersectoral nature. Multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens-especially "ESKAPE" bacteria-can withstand lethal doses of antibiotics with various chemical structures and mechanisms of action. Pharmaceutical companies are increasingly turning away from participating in the development of new antibiotics, due to the regulatory environment and the financial risks. There is an urgent need for innovation in antibiotic research, as classical discovery platforms (e.g., mining soil Streptomycetes) are no longer viable options. In addition to discovery platforms, a concept of an ideal antibiotic should be postulated, to act as a blueprint for future drugs, and to aid researchers, pharmaceutical companies, and relevant stakeholders in selecting lead compounds. Based on 150 references, the aim of this review is to summarize current advances regarding the challenges of antibiotic drug discovery and the specific attributes of an ideal antibacterial drug (a prodrug or generally reactive compound with no specific target, broad-spectrum antibacterial activity, adequate penetration through the Gram-negative cell wall, activity in biofilms and in hard-to-treat infections, accumulation in macrophages, availability for oral administration, and for use in sensitive patient groups).Entities:
Keywords: ESKAPE; Mycobacterium; antibiotic; biofilm; drug discovery; metronidazole; multidrug-resistance; persisters; prodrug
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30832456 PMCID: PMC6429336 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24050892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Overview of various discovery platforms for antibacterial drugs [38,45,46].
| Platform | Brief Description of Pros and Cons | Compounds in Clinical Practice (Examples) |
|---|---|---|
| Domagk-platform/In situ screening-platform |
Screening the efficacy of antimicrobial compounds at the site of infection (with the use of infection models; e.g., in an in situ mouse model or in a Detects prodrug compounds that would be missed by high-throughput screening and validation approaches [ Ethical considerations (related to the use of animal models) | Sulfonamides (sulfamidochrysoidine) |
| Waksmann-platform/Natural products-platform |
Screening for secondary metabolites in soil microorganisms ( Main discovery platform in the golden era of antibiotic discovery [ Background of known compounds during screening presents a major issue [ Experiments are ongoing with the activation of “silent operons” in microorganisms [ Focusing on uncultured microorganisms (representing 99% of total microbial diversity) and compound de-replication (using mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)) are promising approaches [ Screening for antibacterial compounds from plant and marine origins represents an untapped resource of potential drugs [ | Penicillin (First antibiotic discovered) |
| Species-selective platform |
Screening against a specific bug, resulting in compounds that act selectively against that pathogen [ Requires a target that is innate and specific to microorganism Lower probability of toxicity in the human host New compounds will not affect commensals in the gut [ | Bedaquiline F1F0-ATPase-inhibitor in |
| High-throughput screening (HTS) |
Screening of public/commercially available libraries of compounds against bacterial strains and/or defined prokaryotic targets (ligand–target binding assay, specificity tests) [ | Oxazolidinones Inhibitors of protein synthesis by interfering with the ribosomal 50S subunit |
| Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) |
Use of small-sized, positively charged, amphipathic molecules synthesized by plants, animals or other bacteria [ They play an important role in innate immunity in humans (e.g., defensins) [ Structurally, they may be α-helices, β-sheets or extended coils, all with different mechanisms of action [ Toxicity in humans in higher concentrations [ Difficulties in formulation [ | No AMP has been approved yet for clinical use |
| Resistance reversing compounds |
Compounds affecting a defined mechanism of bacterial resistance, e.g., antibiotic-degrading enzymes, efflux pumps [ Strains that are resistant to specific antibiotics may be sensitized, maintaining the efficacy of current drug pool [ The clinical relevance of efflux pump inhibitors (EPIs) is hard to determine | Beta-lactamase inhibitors (clavulanic acid, sulbactam, tazobactam, avibactam etc.) |
| Virulence modulation |
Compounds targeting expression and/or activity of bacterial virulence factors (capsule, toxins, fimbriae, biofilm) essential in their pathogenesis [ Various small-molecule compounds (e.g., quorum sensing-inhibitors) and monoclonal antibodies have been described [ Selective pressure to develop resistance is not present [ The clinical relevance of virulence modulators is hard to determine | No virulence modulator has been approved yet for clinical use |
Figure 1Antibiotics that closely resemble the properties set up by the ideal antibiotic (prodrug) model. (A): metronidazole; (B) ethionamide (ETH); (C) isoniazid (INH); D: pyrazinamide (PYR).
Summary of the properties of the ideal antibiotic.
| Drug-Specific | Pathogen-Specific |
|---|---|
| Available for oral administration | Broad-spectrum bactericidal activity (including Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, |
| Acts as a prodrug | Antibacterial activity against persisters and pathogens in biofilms |
| Class I in the Biopharmaceutical Classification System | Activity at very low (nanomolar) concentrations |
| Accumulation in macrophages | Useful in hard-to-reach infected sites, e.g., abscesses, central nervous system (CNS), bone tissue |
| No teratogenic effects (safe in pregnancy, lactation and childhood) | Acts on multiple, unrelated, essential bacterial targets |
| No drug–drug interactions | Forms irreversible covalent bonds inside bacterial cells (ruling out drug efflux) |
| The drug is excreted from the body unchanged |