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Title

Targeting virulence: can we make evolution-proof drugs?

Authors

Allen, Richard C.; Popat, Roman; Diggle, Stephen P.; Brown, Sam P.

Abstract

Antivirulence drugs are a new type of therapeutic drug that target virulence factors, potentially revitalising the drug-development pipeline with new targets. As antivirulence drugs disarm the pathogen, rather than kill or halt pathogen growth, it has been hypothesized that they will generate much weaker selection for resistance than traditional antibiotics. However, recent studies have shown that mechanisms of resistance to antivirulence drugs exist, seemingly damaging the 'evolution-proof' claim. In this Opinion article, we highlight a crucial distinction between whether resistance can emerge and whether it will spread to a high frequency under drug selection. We argue that selection for resistance can be reduced, or even reversed, using appropriate combinations of target and treatment environment, opening a path towards the development of evolutionarily robust novel therapeutics.

Subjects

ANTI-infective agents; MICROBIAL virulence; ANTIBIOTICS; PHARMACEUTICAL microbiology; MICROBIAL metabolites

Publication

Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2014, Vol 12, Issue 4, p300

ISSN

1740-1526

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/nrmicro3232

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