Litcius/Paper detail

Targeting the Bacterial SOS Response for New Antimicrobial Agents: Drug targets, Molecular Mechanisms and Inhibitors

Thomas Lanyon‐Hogg

2021Future Medicinal Chemistry30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance is a pressing threat to global health, with multidrug-resistant pathogens becoming increasingly prevalent. The bacterial SOS pathway functions in response to DNA damage that occurs during infection, initiating several pro-survival and resistance mechanisms, such as DNA repair and hypermutation. This makes SOS pathway components potential targets that may combat drug-resistant pathogens and decrease resistance emergence. This review discusses the mechanism of the SOS pathway; the structure and function of potential targets AddAB, RecBCD, RecA and LexA; and efforts to develop selective small-molecule inhibitors of these proteins. These inhibitors may serve as valuable tools for target validation and provide the foundations for desperately needed novel antibacterial therapeutics.

Topics & Concepts

SOS responseRecBCDRepressor lexABiologyDNA damageAntimicrobialDNA repairDrug resistanceAntibiotic resistanceDrug discoveryAntimicrobial drugDrugMultiple drug resistanceComputational biologyMicrobiologyDNABacteriaGeneticsBioinformaticsPharmacologyTranscription factorRepressorGeneAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaCancer therapeutics and mechanismsBioactive Compounds and Antitumor Agents