Infectious Disorders - Drug Targets

Author(s): Sanath Kumar, Guixin He, Prathusha Kakarla, Ugina Shrestha, Ranjana KC, Indrika Ranaweera, T. Mark Willmon, Sharla R. Barr, Alberto J. Hernandez and Manuel F. Varela

DOI: 10.2174/1871526516666160407113848

DownloadDownload PDF Flyer Cite As
Bacterial Multidrug Efflux Pumps of the Major Facilitator Superfamily as Targets for Modulation

Page: [28 - 43] Pages: 16

  • * (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Causative agents of infectious disease that are multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens represent a serious public health concern due to the increasingly difficult nature of achieving efficacious clinical treatments. Of the various acquired and intrinsic antimicrobial agent resistance determinants, integral-membrane multidrug efflux pumps of the major facilitator superfamily constitute a major mechanism of bacterial resistance. The major facilitator superfamily (MFS) encompasses thousands of known related secondary active and passive solute transporters, including multidrug efflux pumps, from bacteria to humans. This review article addresses recent developments involving the targeting by various modulators of bacterial multidrug efflux pumps from the major facilitator superfamily. It is currently of tremendous interest to modulate bacterial multidrug efflux pumps in order to eventually restore the clinical efficacy of therapeutic agents against recalcitrant bacterial infections. Such MFS multidrug efflux pumps are good targets for modulation.

Keywords: Antimicrobial agents, bacterial pathogens, drug targets, efflux pump modulation, infection, major facilitator superfamily, multidrug resistance.