Revisiting the potential of natural products in antimycobacterial therapy: advances in drug discovery and semisynthetic solutions.

Publication date: Dec 31, 2024

Natural products have been pivotal in treating mycobacterial infections with early antibiotics such as streptomycin, forming the foundation of tuberculosis therapy. However, the emergence of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant Mycobacterium species has intensified the need for novel antimycobacterial agents. In this review, we revisit the historical contributions of natural products to antimycobacterial drug discovery and highlight recent advances in the field. We assess the application of molecular networking and the exploration of unculturable bacteria in identifying new antimycobacterial compounds such as amycobactin and levesquamides. We also highlight the role of semisynthesis in optimizing natural products, exemplified by sequanamycins and spectinomycin analogs that evade M. tuberculosis’ intrinsic resistance. Finally, we discuss emerging technologies that are promising to accelerate the discovery and development of next-generation antimycobacterial therapies. Despite ongoing challenges, these innovative approaches offer renewed hope in addressing the growing crisis of drug-resistant mycobacterial infections.

Concepts Keywords
Accelerate Antimycobacterial
Amycobactin Drug
Antimycobacterial Highlight
Molecular Infections
Therapy Mycobacterial
Natural
Pivotal
Potential
Products
Resistant
Revisiting
Semisynthetic
Solutions
Therapy
Tuberculosis

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH infections
drug DRUGBANK Streptomycin
disease MESH tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease IDO bacteria
disease IDO role
drug DRUGBANK Spectinomycin

Original Article

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