| Literature DB >> 33824633 |
Han Dai1, Jie Han1, Eric Lichtfouse2,3.
Abstract
Prevention is better than cure. A milestone of the anthropocene is the emergence of a series of epidemics and pandemics often characterized by the transmission of a pathogen from animals to human in the past two decades. In particular, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has made a profound impact on emergency responding and policy-making in a public health crisis. Classical solutions for controlling the virus, such as travel restrictions, lockdowns, repurposed drugs and vaccines, are socially unpopular and medically limited by the fast mutation and adaptation of the virus. This is exacerbated by microbial resistance to therapeutic drugs and the slowness of vaccine development. In other words, microbial pathogens are somehow 'smarter' and faster than us, thus calling for more intelligent cures to combat future pandemics. Here, we compare therapeutics for COVID-19 such as synthetic drugs, vaccines, antibodies and phages. We present the strength and limitations of antibiotic and antiviral drugs, vaccines, and antibody-based therapeutics. We describe smarter, cheaper and preventive cures such as bacteriophages, food medicine using probiotics and prebiotics, sports, healthy diet, music, yoga, Tai Chi, dance, reading, knitting, cooking and outdoor activities. Some of these preventive cures have been intuitively developed since thousands of years ago, as illustrated by the fascinating similarity of the Chinese characters for 'music' and 'herbal medicine.'Entities:
Keywords: Coronavirus; Immune system; Immunotherapy; Microbial resistance; Probiotics; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2021 PMID: 33824633 PMCID: PMC8017513 DOI: 10.1007/s10311-021-01224-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Chem Lett ISSN: 1610-3653 Impact factor: 9.027
Fig. 1Classical and alternative medicines. Classical medicine treats patients with chemical drugs and vaccines after disease appearance; this approach is limited by pathogen mutation and adaptation to drugs, e.g., antibiotic resistance. Alternative medicine treats patients before disease appearance with living organisms, e.g., phages, probiotics or by applying practices that reinforce human immunity, e.g., sports, yoga, music, dance, healthy diet and outdoor activities
Modes of action, advantages and limitations of classical and alternative cures for human infections caused by pathogens
| Type of cure | Modes of action (mechanism) | Advantages | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotics | Inhibit cell wall synthesis Enhance the permeability of bacterial cell membrane Interfere with protein synthesis Inhibit nucleic acid replication and transcription | Wide applicability Safe Plentiful Cheap or affordable | Promotes microbial resistance Gastrointestinal dysfunction Disruption of microbial community | Brown and Wright ( |
| Antivirals | Directly inhibit or kill viruses Interfere with virus attachment Prevent viruses from penetrating into cells Inhibit virus biosynthesis Inhibit virus release Enhance the antiviral ability of the host | Wide applicability Plentiful Immunomodulation effects (interferons) Targeted therapy | Promotes viral resistance Long treatment cycle Risk of rebound after withdrawal of medication Can be expensive | Asselah et al. ( |
| Vaccines | Induce immune response in human body to produce memory T cells and memory B cells, conferring specific immunity to humans | High immune effect Long period of protection (for some pathogens) High specificity Multiple administration routes Cheap or affordable | Long research & development cycle May fail or become less effective as pathogens evolve, requiring continuing vaccine development and vaccinations for protection Difficult to develop vaccines for fast-mutating species | Hilleman ( |
| Antibodies | Specific binding with antigens Based on the type of actions, they can be grouped into lectin, precipitin, antitoxin, lysin, opsonin, neutralizing antibody, complement fixation antibody, and others | High specificity Low doses required | Low yield Long preparation cycle Short-term prevention High costs | Corti et al. ( |
| Phages | Adsorb: a phage adsorbs on the surface of a bacterium Invade: a phage enters the bacterium Replicate: a phage replicates itself in the bacterium Lyse: a phage breaks through the bacterium, the bacterium ruptures, and releases the replicating phage | High specificity Short research & development cycle High yield Safe | Not effective on viral pathogens without genome modification Unknown side effects | Danis-Wlodarczyk et al. ( |
| Probiotics | Strengthen the gastrointestinal barrier by regulating tight junctions between intestinal epithelial cells Inhibit the invasion or overgrowth of pathogens Secreting bio-enzymes and bioactive peptides to promote the multiplication of immune cells and to participate in the repair of organs and tissues | Immunomodulatory effects High yield Safe, mostly from food No additional costs Preventive effects | Not an immediate cure A complex microbial community requiring further studies on their modes of action on invading pathogens and their long-term effects on human immune functions | Antunes et al. ( |
Fig. 2Traditional Chinese characters of ‘music’ (a) and ‘herbal medicine’ (b). In ancient China, one of music’s earliest purposes was for healing. The two characters are similar on both strokes and pronunciations. Psychology and physiology are regarded as a unified whole in Chinese medicine, which means in the etiology, pathogenesis and treatment, changes in psychological and physiological interact together mostly (Karchmer 2013). Over 2000 years, music therapy is an important non-physiological approach for Chinese medicine in its therapeutic spectrum. Reprint from Zhang and Lai (2017)