Combating intracellular pathogens with repurposed host-targeted drugs

S Schor, S Einav - ACS infectious diseases, 2018 - ACS Publications
S Schor, S Einav
ACS infectious diseases, 2018ACS Publications
There is a large, global unmet need for the development of countermeasures to combat
intracellular pathogens. The development of novel antimicrobials is expensive and slow and
typically focuses on selective inhibition of proteins encoded by a single pathogen, thereby
providing a narrow spectrum of coverage. The repurposing of approved drugs targeting host
functions required for microbial infections represents a promising alternative. This review
summarizes progress and challenges in the repurposing of approved drugs as host-targeted …
There is a large, global unmet need for the development of countermeasures to combat intracellular pathogens. The development of novel antimicrobials is expensive and slow and typically focuses on selective inhibition of proteins encoded by a single pathogen, thereby providing a narrow spectrum of coverage. The repurposing of approved drugs targeting host functions required for microbial infections represents a promising alternative. This review summarizes progress and challenges in the repurposing of approved drugs as host-targeted broad-spectrum agents for the treatment of intracellular pathogens. These strategies include targeting both cellular factors required for infection by various viruses, intracellular bacteria, and/or protozoa as well as factors that modulate the host immune response to these microbial infections. The repurposed approach offers complementary means to develop therapeutics against existing and emerging intracellular microbial threats.
ACS Publications