论文标题
下一代抗生素的三个创新:可发展性,特异性和非免疫原性
Three innovations of next-generation antibiotics: evolvability, specificity, and non-immunogenicity
论文作者
论文摘要
抗菌耐药性是一种无声的大流行,由于不受控制的抗生素使用而加剧了抗生素。自从发现青霉素以来,我们在很大程度上取决于微生物衍生的小分子来治疗细菌感染。然而,随着抗菌抗性对这些抗菌化合物的抗性的出现和传播的抗生素的黄金时代即将结束。当前的抗生素市场遭受了各种缺陷,包括缺乏盈利能力和投资。但是,传统抗生素最重要的潜在问题是这些小分子的固有特性大多是广谱和不可编程的。随着微生物的科学知识的发展,科学界开始探索完全新颖的方法来应对抗菌抗性。最突出的方法之一是开发下一代抗生素。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了与传统抗生素相比,下一代抗生素的三项创新是特异性,可发展性和非免疫原性。我们提供许多潜在的抗菌剂,包括基于噬菌体的治疗,基于CRISPR-CAS的抗菌剂和微生物组衍生的抗菌化合物。这些替代性抗微生物剂具有创新的特性,可以克服传统抗生素的固有缺点,其中一些下一代抗生素不仅是牵强的思想,而且目前正在临床发展中。我们进一步讨论了一些相关的问题和挑战,例如感染诊断和监管框架,这些问题仍然需要解决,以将这些下一代抗生素带入抗生素市场作为可行的产品,以使用一组多样化的策略来打击抗菌抗性。
Antimicrobial resistance is a silent pandemic that is being exacerbated by the uncontrolled use of antibiotics. Since the discovery of penicillin, we have been largely dependent on microbe-derived small molecules to treat bacterial infections. However, the golden era of antibiotics is coming to an end as the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance against these antibacterial compounds is outpacing the discovery and development of new antibiotics. The current antibiotic market suffers from various shortcomings, including the absence of profitability and investment. However, the most important underlying issue of traditional antibiotics arises from the inherent properties of these small molecules being mostly broad-spectrum and non-programmable. As the scientific knowledge of microbes progresses, the scientific community is starting to explore entirely novel approaches to tackling antimicrobial resistance. One of the most prominent approaches is to develop next-generation antibiotics. In this review, we discuss three innovations of next-generation antibiotics compared to traditional antibiotics as specificity, evolvability, and non-immunogenicity. We present a number of potential antimicrobial agents, including bacteriophage-based therapy, CRISPR-Cas-based antimicrobials, and microbiome-derived antimicrobial compounds. These alternative antimicrobial agents possess innovative properties that may overcome the inherent shortcomings of traditional antibiotics, and some of these next-generation antibiotics are not merely far-fetched ideas but are currently in clinical development. We further discuss some related issues and challenges such as infection diagnostics and regulatory frameworks that still need to be addressed to bring these next-generation antibiotics to the antibiotic market as viable products to combat antimicrobial resistance using a diversified set of strategies.