Journal
CURRENT OPINION IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue -, Pages 30-38Publisher
CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2019.03.004
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- Ramon Areces Foundation
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Merging concepts from synthetic biology and computational biology may yield antibiotics that are less likely to elicit resistance than existing drugs and that yet can fight drug resistant infections. Indeed, computer-guided strategies coupled with massively parallel high-throughput experimental methods represent a new paradigm for antibiotic discovery. Infections caused by multidrug-resistant microorganisms are increasingly deadly. In the current post-antibiotic era, many of these infections cannot be treated with our existing antimicrobial arsenal. Furthermore, we may have already exhausted the category of large molecules produced in nature having antimicrobial activity: the antibiotic scaffolds we have discovered so far may represent the majority of those that exist. The rise in drug-resistant bacteria and lack of new antibiotic classes clearly call for out-of-the-box strategies. Recent advances in computational synthetic biology have enabled the development of antimicrobials. New molecular descriptors and genetic and pattern recognition algorithms are powerful tools that bring us a step closer to developing efficient antibiotics. We review several computational tools for drug design and a number of recently generated antibiotic candidates, with an emphasis on peptide-based molecules. Design strategies can generate a diversity of synthetic antimicrobial peptides, which may help to mitigate the spread of resistance and combat multidrug-resistant microorganisms.
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