concepts and principles of photodynamic therapy as an alternative antifungal discovery platform

Clicks: 209
ID: 214249
2012
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality Improving Quality
0.0 /100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
Opportunistic fungal pathogens may cause superficial or serious invasive infections, especially in immunocompromised and debilitated patients. Invasive mycoses represent an exponentially growing threat for human health due to a combination of slow diagnosis and the existence of relatively few classes of available and effective antifungal drugs. Therefore systemic fungal infections result in high attributable mortality. There is an urgent need to pursue and deploy novel and effective alternative anti-fungal countermeasures. Photodynamic therapy was established as a successful modality for malignancies and age-related macular degeneration but photodynamic inactivation has only recently been intensively investigated as an alternative antimicrobial discovery and development platform. The concept of photodynamic inactivation requires microbial exposure to either exogenous or endogenous photosensitizer molecules, followed by visible light energy, typically wavelengths in the red/near infrared region that cause the excitation of the photosensitizers resulting in the production of singlet oxygen and other reactive oxygen species that react with intracellular components, and consequently produce cell inactivation and death. Anti-fungal photodynamic therapy is an area of increasing interest, as research is advancing i) to identify the photochemical and photophysical mechanisms involved in photoinactivation; ii) to develop potent and clinically compatible photosensitizers; iii) to understand how photoinactivation is affected by key microbial phenotypic elements multidrug resistance and efflux, virulence and pathogenesis determinants, and formation of biofilms; iv) to explore novel photosensitizer delivery platforms and v) to identify photoinactivation applications beyond the clinical setting such as environmental disinfectants.
Reference Key
etegos2012frontiersconcepts Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors ;George eTegos;George eTegos;George eTegos;Tianhong eDai;Tianhong eDai;Beth B Fuchs;Jeffrey J Coleman;Renato Araujo Prates;Christos eAstrakas;Tyler G St Denis;Tyler G St Denis;Martha S Ribeiro;Eleftherios eMylonakis;Michael R Hamblin;Michael R Hamblin;Michael R Hamblin
Journal journal of magnetic resonance (san diego, calif : 1997)
Year 2012
DOI 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00120
URL
Keywords

Citations

No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org

No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.