Anti-Fungals Flashcards

1
Q

What are the key sterols in mammalian and fungal cells? What is the difference between them?

A

mammalian - cholesterol
fungal - ergosterol

ergosterol has

  • an extra double bond between C-7 and C-8
  • an extra double bond between C-22 and C-23
  • an extra methyl group at C-24
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2
Q

What is the purpose of sterols?

A

sterols control the fluidity of the membrane and help to maintain its stability

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3
Q

How are cholesterol and ergosterol synthesised?

A

squalene (precursor) is converted to squalene epoxide by enzyme squalene epoxidase

squalene epoxide is converted to lanosterol by enzyme squalene cyclase

lanosterol can be converted to cholesterol or ergosterol

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4
Q

What are the different types of anti-fungals?

A
allylamines
azoles - imidazoles and triazoles
polyenes
griseofulvin
flucytosine
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5
Q

What is the mechanism of action of allyamines?

A

process involves selective inhibition of the fungal enzyme squalene epoxidase over the mammalian enzyme

  • results in a build up of squalene and a lack of ergosterol
    = fungistatic depletion of ergosterol
  • compromises the integrity of the cell membrane leading to cell death
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6
Q

What is the mechanism of azoles?

A

both azoles inhibit demethylase enzymes of the cytochrome P450 family in the biosynthetic pathway between lanosterol and ergosterol

inhibit

  • 14-alpha demethylase
  • 4-alpha demethylase

are either fungistatic or fungicidal dependent on concentration

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7
Q

What is the difference between the azoles?

A

imidazole
- have two nitrogens in the five membered ring

triazole
- have three nitrogens in the five membered ring

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8
Q

What is the mechanism of action of polyenes?

A

polyenes bind to sterols in the cell membrane
- have a higher affinity for ergosterol

polyenes/sterols units form rings making a channel in the cell membrane

  • pores are big enough to allow the passage of potassium and magnesium ions out of the cell
  • pores alter the membrane structure and activity of membrane associated enzymes
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9
Q

What is the mechanism of action of griseofulvin?

A

mechanism of action is similar to anti-cancer drugs
= vinblastin, paclitaxel

griseofulvin binds to tubulin and prevents the polymerisation of tubulin into microtubules
- inhibition of microtubule formation prevents the formation of the mitotic spindle and hence mitosis causing cell death

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10
Q

What is the mechanism of action of flucytosine?

A

flucytosine is an antimetabolite prodrug

after being taken up into the cell, it undergoes deamination via cytosine deaminate
- forms 5-fluorouracil

5-fluorouracil replaces uracil in the RNA which then inhibits DNA and protein synthesis

mammalian cells lack cytosine deaminase
- selective toxicity

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