TY - JOUR
T1 - Future target-based drug discovery for tuberculosis?
AU - Kana, Bavesh Davandra
AU - Karakousis, Petros C.
AU - Parish, Tanya
AU - Dick, Thomas
N1 - Funding Information:
B.D.K is supported by grants from the National Research Foundation , DCOE000 , the Howard Hughes Medical Institute , HHMI000 (International Early Career Scientist grant), the Global Health Grant , OPP1100182 and the National Institutes of Health ( U01 AI069453-07 ). T.D. is funded by the Ministry of Health, National Medical Research Council ( CBRG/022/2012 , TCR12dec007 , CG/013/2013 , CBRG12nov049 ), the Singapore MIT Alliance for Research and Technology , and the School of Medicine/National University of Singapore . P.C.K., StartUpFY2011TDick was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health ( R01 AI083125 , R01 HL106786 , and R01 AI106613 ). T.P. was supported by the NIH ( R01AI095652 and R01AI099188 ) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation , under grant OPP1024038 . The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health or other funding bodies.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2014/12/1
Y1 - 2014/12/1
N2 - New drugs that retain potency against multidrug/extensively drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, with the additional benefit of a shortened treatment duration and ease of administration, are urgently needed by tuberculosis (TB) control programs. Efforts to develop this new generation of treatment interventions have been plagued with numerous problems, the most significant being our insufficient understanding of mycobacterial metabolism during disease. This, combined with limited chemical diversity and poor entry of small molecules into the cell, has limited the number of new bioactive agents that result from drug screening efforts. The biochemical, target-driven approach to drug development has been largely abandoned in the TB field, to be replaced by whole-cell or target-based whole-cell screening approaches. In this context, the properties of a good drug target are unclear, since these are directly determined by the ability to find compounds, using current screening algorithms, which are able to kill M. tuberculosis. In this review, we discuss issues related to the identification and validation of drug targets and highlight some key properties for promising targets. Some of these include essentiality for growth, vulnerability, druggability, reduced propensity to evolve drug resistance and target location to facilitate ready access to drugs during chemotherapy. We present these in the context of recent drugs that have emerged through various approaches with the aim of consolidating the knowledge gained from these experiences to inform future efforts.
AB - New drugs that retain potency against multidrug/extensively drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, with the additional benefit of a shortened treatment duration and ease of administration, are urgently needed by tuberculosis (TB) control programs. Efforts to develop this new generation of treatment interventions have been plagued with numerous problems, the most significant being our insufficient understanding of mycobacterial metabolism during disease. This, combined with limited chemical diversity and poor entry of small molecules into the cell, has limited the number of new bioactive agents that result from drug screening efforts. The biochemical, target-driven approach to drug development has been largely abandoned in the TB field, to be replaced by whole-cell or target-based whole-cell screening approaches. In this context, the properties of a good drug target are unclear, since these are directly determined by the ability to find compounds, using current screening algorithms, which are able to kill M. tuberculosis. In this review, we discuss issues related to the identification and validation of drug targets and highlight some key properties for promising targets. Some of these include essentiality for growth, vulnerability, druggability, reduced propensity to evolve drug resistance and target location to facilitate ready access to drugs during chemotherapy. We present these in the context of recent drugs that have emerged through various approaches with the aim of consolidating the knowledge gained from these experiences to inform future efforts.
KW - Drug development
KW - Drug targets
KW - Target vulnerability
KW - Tuberculosis
KW - Whole-cell screens
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U2 - 10.1016/j.tube.2014.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.tube.2014.10.003
M3 - Review article
C2 - 25458615
AN - SCOPUS:84919443395
SN - 1472-9792
VL - 94
SP - 551
EP - 556
JO - Tuberculosis
JF - Tuberculosis
IS - 6
ER -