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Título
Natural products targeting the synthesis of β(1,3)-D-glucan and chitin of the fungal cell wall. Existing drugs and recent findings
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Systemic fungal infection
Fungal cell wall
Cell wall synthases
Bioactive natural products
Plant extracts
Antifungal drugs
Clasificación UNESCO
2414 Microbiología
2409 Genética
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Curto, M. Á., Butassi, E., Ribas, J. C., Svetaz, L. A., & Cortés, J. C. G. (2021). Natural products targeting the synthesis of β(1,3)-D-glucan and chitin of the fungal cell wall. Existing drugs and recent findings. Phytomedicine, 88, 153556. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phymed.2021.153556
Resumen
[EN] Background: During the last three decades systemic fungal infections associated to immunosuppressive therapies have become a serious healthcare problem. Clinical development of new antifungals is an urgent requirement. Since fungal but not mammalian cells are encased in a carbohydrate-containing cell wall, which is required
for the growth and viability of fungi, the inhibition of cell wall synthesizing machinery, such as β(1,3)-D-glucan
synthases (GS) and chitin synthases (CS) that catalyze the synthesis of β(1-3)-D-glucan and chitin, respectively,
represent an ideal mode of action of antifungal agents. Although the echinocandins anidulafungin, caspofungin
and micafungin are clinically well-established GS inhibitors for the treatment of invasive fungal infections, much
effort must still be made to identify inhibitors of other enzymes and processes involved in the synthesis of the
fungal cell wall.
Purpose: Since natural products (NPs) have been the source of several antifungals in clinical use and also have
provided important scaffolds for the development of semisynthetic analogues, this review was devoted to
investigate the advances made to date in the discovery of NPs from plants that showed capacity of inhibiting cell
wall synthesis targets. The chemical characterization, specific target, discovery process, along with the stage of
development are provided here.
Methods: An extensive systematic search for NPs against the cell wall was performed considering all the
articles published until the end of 2020 through the following scientific databases: NCBI PubMed, Scopus and
Google Scholar and using the combination of the terms “natural antifungals” and “plant extracts” with “fungal
cell wall”.
Results: The first part of this review introduces the state of the art of the structure and biosynthesis of the
fungal cell wall and considers exclusively those naturally produced GS antifungals that have given rise to both
existing semisynthetic approved drugs and those derivatives currently in clinical trials. According to their
chemical structure, natural GS inhibitors can be classified as 1) cyclic lipopeptides, 2) glycolipids and 3) acidic
terpenoids. We also included nikkomycins and polyoxins, NPs that inhibit the CS, which have traditionally been
considered good candidates for antifungal drug development but have finally been discarded after enduring
unsuccessful clinical trials. Finally, the review focuses in the most recent findings about the growing field of
plant-derived molecules and extracts that exhibit activity against the fungal cell wall. Thus, this search yielded
sixteen articles, nine of which deal with pure compounds and seven with plant extracts or fractions with proven
activity against the fungal cell wall. Regarding the mechanism of action, seven (44%) produced GS inhibition
while five (31%) inhibited CS. Some of them (56%) interfered with other components of the cell wall. Most of the
analyzed articles refer to tests carried out in vitro and therefore are in early stages of development. Conclusion: This report delivers an overview about both existing natural antifungals targeting GS and CS
activities and their mechanisms of action. It also presents recent discoveries on natural products that may be used
as starting points for the development of potential selective and non-toxic antifungal drugs.
URI
ISSN
0944-7113
DOI
10.1016/j.phymed.2021.153556
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024
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