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- Volume 5, Issue 1, 2005
Current Drug Targets - Infectious Disorders - Volume 5, Issue 1, 2005

Volume 5, Issue 1, 2005
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Multi-targeting the Entrance Door to Block HIV-1
Authors: G. Borkow and A. LapidotThe multistep nature of HIV-1 entry provides multisite targeting at the entrance door of HIV-1 to cells. Blocking HIV-1 entry to its host cells has clear advantages over blocking subsequent stages in the life cycle of the virus. Indeed, potent cooperative and synergistic inhibition of HIV-1 proliferation has been observed in in vitro studies with several entry inhibitor combinations, interacting with different steps of the HIV-1-cell entry cas Read More
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Orthopoxvirus Targets for the Development of Antiviral Therapies
Authors: Mark N. Prichard and Earl R. KernThe potential use of smallpox virus as a bioterror agent and the endemic presence of monkeypox virus in Africa underscores the need for better therapies for orthopoxvirus infections. The only existing clinical experience treating vaccinia and smallpox infections has been with Marboran, which suggested that antiviral therapies could be effective in treating and preventing smallpox infections, but this compound has not been pur Read More
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Advances on Cyclin-dependent Kinases (CDKs) as Novel Targets for Antiviral Drugs
By L. M. SchangAlthough targeting viral proteins has lead to many successful antiviral drugs, these antivirals have certain limitations. They rapidly select for resistance, tend to be active against only a few related viruses and the proteins of a pathogen must be characterized before such drugs can be developed. Consequently, a long period is required from the identification of a new pathogen to the development of relevant antivirals, Read More
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PDF Inhibitors: An Emerging Class of Antibacterial Drugs
Authors: K. W. Johnson, D. Lofland and H. E. MoserThe metalloenzyme peptide deformylase (PDF) represents one of the most promising bacterial targets in the search for novel mode of action antibiotics that lack cross-resistance to existing drugs. Initial research and clinical development has focused on anti-pneumococcal applications. During optimization, peptide analogs were developed containing either a hydroxamate or formyl-hydroxylamine as metal interacting gro Read More
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Amino Acid Metabolic Routes in Trypanosoma cruzi: Possible Therapeutic Targets Against Chagas; Disease
Chagas' disease is a zoonosis caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, a haematic protozoan, transmitted by insects from the Reduviidae family. This constitutes a relevant health and socio-economic problem in the Americas, with 11 - 18 million people infected, and approximately 100 million people at risk. The therapeutic possibilities rely into two drugs, nifurtimox® and benznidazole®, that were discovered more than thirty y Read More
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Blood-brain Barrier Drug Discovery for Central Nervous System Infections
Authors: Ambrose Jong and Sheng-He HuangCentral nervous system (CNS) infections are formidable diseases with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Since the majority of antimicrobial agents discovered so far do not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the treatment of CNS infections is a major challenge issue. The development of drugs to treat those diseases requires consideration of achievable brain concentrations by targeting the following question. How can the Read More
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