| Literature DB >> 33261213 |
Hans Carolus1,2, Siebe Pierson1,2, Katrien Lagrou3,4, Patrick Van Dijck1,2.
Abstract
Although polyenes were the first broad spectrum antifungal drugs on the market, after 70 years they are still the gold standard to treat a variety of fungal infections. Polyenes such as amphotericin B have a controversial image. They are the antifungal drug class with the broadest spectrum, resistance development is still relatively rare and fungicidal properties are extensive. Yet, they come with a significant host toxicity that limits their use. Relatively recently, the mode of action of polyenes has been revised, new mechanisms of drug resistance were discovered and emergent polyene resistant species such as Candida auris entered the picture. This review provides a short description of the history and clinical use of polyenes, and focusses on the ongoing debate concerning their mode of action, the diversity of resistance mechanisms discovered to date and the most recent trends in polyene resistance development.Entities:
Keywords: amphotericin B; antifungal drug resistance; discovery; mode of action; polyene
Year: 2020 PMID: 33261213 PMCID: PMC7724567 DOI: 10.3390/jof6040321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Chemical structure of nystatin, amphotericin B and natamycin (pimaricin).
Figure 2Three-dimensional model of amphotericin B (a) with the cylindrical ergosterol (b) and sigmoidal cholesterol (c). The three types of non-covalent interactions between amphotericin B and ergosterol are shown.
Figure 3Four mechanistic models of the interaction of amphotericin B with ergosterol in/near the plasma membrane: (A) the pore forming model, (B) the half-pore forming model, (C) the surface adsorption model and (D) the sterol sponge model (Legend: see Figure 2).
Figure 4Schematic overview of the amphotericin B modes of action and drug resistance mechanisms in fungal cells. * association exists but has not been validated. See text for explanation. Gene names with delta symbol indicate mutations and not full deletions.