| Literature DB >> 33276545 |
Saad Alghamdi1, Shaheed Ur Rehman2, Nashwa Talaat Shesha3, Hani Faidah4, Muhammad Khurram2, Sabi Ur Rehman2.
Abstract
According to WHO report, globally about 10 million active tuberculosis cases, resulting in about 1.6 million deaths, further aggravated by drug-resistant tuberculosis and/or comorbidities with HIV and diabetes are present. Incomplete therapeutic regimen, meager dosing, and the capability of the latent and/or active state tubercular bacilli to abide and do survive against contemporary first-line and second line antitubercular drugs escalate the prevalence of drug-resistant tuberculosis. As a better understanding of tuberculosis, microanatomy has discovered an extended range of new promising antitubercular targets and diagnostic biomarkers. However, there are still no new approved antitubercular drugs of routine therapy for several decades, except for bedaquiline, delamanid, and pretomanid approved tentatively. Despite this, innovative methods are also urgently needed to find potential new antitubercular drug candidates, which potentially decimate both latent state and active state mycobacterium tuberculosis. To explore and identify the most potential antitubercular drug candidate among various reported compounds, we focused to highlight the promising lead derivatives of isoniazid, coumarin, griselimycin, and the antimicrobial peptides. The aim of the present review is to fascinate significant lead compounds in the development of potential clinical drug candidates that might be more precise and effective against drug-resistant tuberculosis, the world research looking for a long time.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial peptides; coumarin derivatives; drug-resistant tuberculosis; isoniazid derivatives
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33276545 PMCID: PMC7729780 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25235685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
WHO classification of antitubercular drugs.
| Drug Class | Included Drugs |
|---|---|
| (A) Fluoroquinolones | Levofloxacin, gatifloxacin, moxifloxacin |
| (B) Second-line injectables | Streptomycin, kanamycin, amikacin, capreomycin |
| (C) Other core second-line drugs | Ethionamide, cycloserine/terizidone, prothionamide, linezolid, clofazimine |
| (D) Noncore, multidrug-resistant tubercular drugs | i. High dose—isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol |
Selected chemotherapeutic derivatives and antimicrobial peptides, their molecular targets, mechanism of action, and investigated minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) range.
| Drug Class | Lead Compounds | Molecular Targets/Mechanism of Action | MIC Range | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isoniazid derivatives | 2-Cyano- | Inhibition of mycolic acid synthesis and cell growth inhibitor | 0.43–0.47 μM | [ |
| Coumarin derivatives | 6-((3,3-dimethyloxiran-2-yl)-5,7-dihydroxy-8-(2-methylbutanoyl)-4-phenyl-2H-chromen-2-one (1g), Dimethyl substituted compound (1e), coumarin-oxime ether (1h), a coumarin-theophylline hybrid (3a), LSPN270, LSPN271, LSPN476, and LSPN484 | Cell proliferation inhibitors, cytochrome synthesis disruption, and macrophages activation | 0.12–148 μM | [ |
| Griselimycin derivatives | Cyclohexyl griselimycin | Inhibits DNA repair and replication | 0.05–0.17 μM | [ |
| Antimicrobial peptides | Bacteriocins (Bcn1–Bcn5), protegrin-1, nisin S, D-V13 K, cathelicidin LL37, D-LAK120-A, and D-LAK120-HP13 | Multifunctional host immune regulators, pro-inflammatory cytokine responses regulator, calcium influx, and apoptosis | 0.01–30 μM | [ |
Figure 1Chemical structure of lead isoniazid, coumarin and griselimycin derivatives with minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) value.
Figure 2Mechanism of action for isoniazid, coumarin, and griselimycin derivatives and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs).