对靶向CYP51的抗真菌药物的耐药性。

Journal of Chemical Biology Pub Date : 2014-08-27 eCollection Date: 2014-10-01 DOI:10.1007/s12154-014-0121-1
Josie E Parker, Andrew G S Warrilow, Claire L Price, Jonathan G L Mullins, Diane E Kelly, Steven L Kelly
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引用次数: 125

摘要

真菌病是一个日益严重的全球负担。现在人们认识到,真菌每年导致的死亡人数超过疟疾,而在农业领域,真菌威胁着作物产量和粮食安全。由于农业中广泛使用三唑类杀菌剂和临床中广泛使用三唑类抗真菌药物,包括目标酶(CYP51)的点突变在内的多种机制介导了对唑类药物的耐药性。早在20世纪90年代,在白色念珠菌和后来的烟曲霉的临床分离株中就发现了类似的突变,这些突变已在农业上重要的真菌物种和更广泛的点突变组合中被发现。最近,有证据表明突变起源于野外,现在出现在临床感染中。随着三唑类杀菌剂的使用继续增加,这种情况可能会增加。在这里,我们回顾了在临床上和农业上重要的真菌物种中发现的唑耐药性的进展,重点是与CYP51相关的耐药机制。通过配体结合研究和唑IC50测定对野生型和突变型CYP51酶进行生化表征是了解唑敏感性的重要工具,可以与微生物学方法(MIC50值)、分子生物学研究(定点诱变)和蛋白质模型研究结合使用,为未来抗真菌开发提供信息,提高靶酶的特异性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Resistance to antifungals that target CYP51.

Fungal diseases are an increasing global burden. Fungi are now recognised to kill more people annually than malaria, whilst in agriculture, fungi threaten crop yields and food security. Azole resistance, mediated by several mechanisms including point mutations in the target enzyme (CYP51), is increasing through selection pressure as a result of widespread use of triazole fungicides in agriculture and triazole antifungal drugs in the clinic. Mutations similar to those seen in clinical isolates as long ago as the 1990s in Candida albicans and later in Aspergillus fumigatus have been identified in agriculturally important fungal species and also wider combinations of point mutations. Recently, evidence that mutations originate in the field and now appear in clinical infections has been suggested. This situation is likely to increase in prevalence as triazole fungicide use continues to rise. Here, we review the progress made in understanding azole resistance found amongst clinically and agriculturally important fungal species focussing on resistance mechanisms associated with CYP51. Biochemical characterisation of wild-type and mutant CYP51 enzymes through ligand binding studies and azole IC50 determinations is an important tool for understanding azole susceptibility and can be used in conjunction with microbiological methods (MIC50 values), molecular biological studies (site-directed mutagenesis) and protein modelling studies to inform future antifungal development with increased specificity for the target enzyme over the host homologue.

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