4.6 Review

Antifungal activity of thiosemicarbazones, bis(thiosemicarbazones), and their metal complexes

Journal

JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2021.111620

Keywords

Thiosemicarbazone; Bis(thiosemicarbazone); Metal complexes; Antifungal activity; Pathogens; Drug resistance

Funding

  1. Dorothy Gibson Fellowship awarded by the Department of Chemistry
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1955268, CHE-1800245]

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Fungi are common in nature and typically do not harm their hosts, but a small number of pathogenic fungi are rapidly spreading worldwide, posing a threat to global ecosystem health. Emerging drug-resistant fungi highlight the need for new antifungal agents, with metal complexes showing higher activity compared to non-coordinated ligands.
Fungi are ubiquitous in nature, and typically cause little or no environmental or pathogenic damage to their plant, animal, and human hosts. However, a small but growing number of pathogenic fungi are spreading worldwide at an alarming rate threatening global ecosystem health and proliferation. Many of these emerging pathogens have developed multi-drug resistance to front line therapeutics increasing the urgency for the development of new antifungal agents. This review examines the development of thiosemicarbazones, bis(thiosemicarbazones), and their metal complexes as potential antifungal agents against more than 65 different fungal strains. The fungistatic activity of the compounds are quantified based on the zone of inhibition, minimum inhibitory concentration, or growth inhibition percentage. In this review, reported activities were standardized based on molar concentrations to simplify comparisons between different compounds. Of all the fungal strains reported in the review, A. niger in particular was very resistant towards a majority of tested compounds. Our analysis of the data shows that metal complexes are typically more active than non-coordinated ligands with copper(II) and zinc(II) complexes generally displaying the highest activity.

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