| Literature DB >> 35821909 |
Kadiatou Keita1, Charles Darkoh2,3, Florence Okafor1.
Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is a major public health threat of the twenty-first century and represents an important risk to the global economy. Healthcare-associated infections mainly caused by drug-resistant bacteria are wreaking havoc in patient care worldwide. The spread of such pathogens limits the utility of available drugs and complicates the treatment of bacterial diseases. As a result, there is an urgent need for new drugs with mechanisms of action capable of curbing resistance. Plants synthesize and utilize various metabolic compounds to deter pathogens and predators. Utilizing these plant-based metabolites is a promising option in identifying novel bioactive compounds that could be harnessed to develop new potent antimicrobial drugs to treat multidrug-resistant pathogens. The purpose of this review is to highlight medicinal plants as important sources of novel antimicrobial agents that could be developed to help combat antimicrobial resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-infective agents; Antibacterial drug screening; Antimicrobial resistance; Multidrug-resistant pathogens; Plant metabolites; Plant secondary metabolites; Plant-based medical compounds
Year: 2022 PMID: 35821909 PMCID: PMC9264742 DOI: 10.1007/s42452-022-05084-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SN Appl Sci ISSN: 2523-3963
Fig. 1Timeline of antibiotics discovery and year of first observed resistance [15–33]
Fig. 2Antibiotic development pipeline from 2014 to 2019. As of December 2019, a total of 41 antibiotics were in development (15 in Phase 1 clinical trials, 12 in Phase 2, 13 in Phase 3, 1 submitted for FDA application), and 14 approved. It is estimated that only 60% of drugs that enter Phase 3 will be approved for treatment (pewtrusts.org). New antibiotic development involves time and resources and there are very few novel antibiotics under development. The declining number of antibiotics in the development pipeline, in part, reflects the challenges associated with its development. At the same time, bacteria that survives antibiotic treatment are spreading
Fig. 3Plant immune response to pathogens. Bacteria are detected by either pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) or pathogen effectors: I The PAMPS activates the pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) on the plant cell surface, which in turn activates a signaling cascade leading to PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). II Pathogen effectors are recognized by plant resistance proteins, resulting in a hypersensitive response known as effector-triggered immunity (ETI). Together, these defense mechanisms result in the release of various secondary metabolites that ultimately kill the infecting pathogen. Given their novelty to human pathogens, these plant-derived antimicrobial secondary compounds can be harnessed to combat multidrug-resistant pathogens
Examples of plants with known activity against multidrug-resistant pathogens. These plant-based metabolites provide promising option to develop novel drugs against multidrug-resistant pathogens
| Plant name and part | Extract type | Resistant bacteria | Evaluation method | Source, geographical location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water, Ethanol, Methanol | Clinical MDR, XDR, PDR isolates: Klebsiella spp | Microbroth dilution Disc diffusion | Farm in El-Fayoum governorate, Egypt [ | |
| Water extracts | Clinical MDR | Disc diffusion, time-kill assays, murine lung infection model | Herb store in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan [ | |
| CH2Cl2/MeOH MeOH C4H8O2 Extracts | Kanamycin-resistant | Microbroth dilution | Different regions of Cameroon [ | |
| Clinical MDR | ||||
| Clinical MDR | ||||
( | Aqueous, chloroform, ethanol and hexane extracts | Well diffusion | Charsadda region, Pakistan [ | |
| Aqueous Ethanol Extracts | Disc diffusion, time-kill assays | Sudhnoti district, Northern Pakistan [ | ||
| Disc diffusion, time-kill assays | ||||
| Disc diffusion, time-kill assays | ||||
| Time-kill assays | ||||
| Disc diffusion, time-kill assays |