For 70 years antibiotics have saved countless lives and enabled the development of modern medicine, but it is becoming clear that the success of antibiotics may have only been temporary and we now anticipate a long-term, generational and perhaps never-ending challenge to find new therapies to combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria. As the search for new conventional antibiotics has become less productive and there are no clear strategies to improve success, a broader approach to address bacterial infection is needed. This review of potential alternatives to antibiotics (A2As) was commissioned by the Wellcome Trust, jointly funded by the Department of Health, and involved scientists and physicians from academia and industry. For the purpose of this review, A2As were defined as non-compound approaches (that is, products other than classical antibacterial agents) that target bacteria or approaches that target the host. In addition, the review was limited to agents that had potential to be administered orally, by inhalation or by injection for treatment of systemic/invasive infection. Within these criteria, the review has identified 19 A2A approaches now being actively progressed. The feasibility and potential clinical impact of each approach was considered. The most advanced approaches (and the only ones likely to deliver new treatments by 2025) are antibodies, probiotics, and vaccines now in Phase II and Phase III trials. These new agents will target infections caused by P. aeruginosa, C. difficile and S. aureus. However, other than probiotics for C. difficile, this first wave will likely best serve as adjunctive or preventive therapies. This suggests that conventional antibiotics will still be needed. The economics of pathogen-specific therapies must improve to encourage innovation, and greater investment into A2As with broad-spectrum activity (e.g. antimicrobial-, host defense-and, anti-biofilm peptides) is needed. Increased funding, estimated at >£1.5 bn over 10 years is required to validate and then develop these A2As. Investment needs to be partnered with translational expertise and targeted to support the validation of these approaches at Clinical Phase II proof of concept. Such an approach could transform our understanding of A2As as effective new therapies and should provide the catalyst required for both active engagement and investment by the pharma/biotech industry. Only a sustained, concerted and coordinated international effort will provide the solutions needed for the next decade.
The immune response to HIV-1 in patients who carry human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B27 is characterized by an immunodominant response to an epitope in p24 gag (amino acids 263–272, KRWIILGLNK). Substitution of lysine (K) or glycine (G) for arginine (R) at HIV-1 gag residue 264 (R264K and R264G) results in epitopes that bind to HLA-B27 poorly. We have detected a R264K mutation in four patients carrying HLA-B27. In three of these patients the mutation occurred late, coinciding with disease progression. In another it occurred within 1 yr of infection and was associated with a virus of syncytium-inducing phenotype. In each case, R264K was tightly associated with a leucine to methionine change at residue 268. After the loss of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to this epitope and in the presence of high viral load, reversion to wild-type sequence was observed. In a fifth patient, a R264G mutation was detected when HIV-1 disease progressed. Its occurrence was associated with a glutamic acid to aspartic acid mutation at residue 260. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that these substitutions emerged under natural selection rather than by genetic drift or linkage. Outgrowth of CTL escape viruses required high viral loads and additional, possibly compensatory, mutations in the gag protein.
Treatment of HIV-1-infected individuals with a combination of anti-retroviral agents results in sustained suppression of HIV-1 replication, as evidenced by a reduction in plasma viral RNA to levels below the limit of detection of available assays. However, even in patients whose plasma viral RNA levels have been suppressed to below detectable levels for up to 30 months, replication-competent virus can routinely be recovered from patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells and from semen. A reservoir of latently infected cells established early in infection may be involved in the maintenance of viral persistence despite highly active anti-retroviral therapy. However, whether virus replication persists in such patients is unknown. HIV-1 cDNA episomes are labile products of virus infection and indicative of recent infection events. Using episome-specific PCR, we demonstrate here ongoing virus replication in a large percentage of infected individuals on highly active anti-retroviral therapy, despite sustained undetectable levels of plasma viral RNA. The presence of a reservoir of 'covert' virus replication in patients on highly active anti-retroviral therapy has important implications for the clinical management of HIV-1-infected individuals and for the development of virus eradication strategies.
Native disulfide bonds in therapeutic proteins are crucial for tertiary structure and biological activity and are therefore considered unsuitable for chemical modification. We show that native disulfides in human interferon alpha-2b and in a fragment of an antibody to CD4(+) can be modified by site-specific bisalkylation of the two cysteine sulfur atoms to form a three-carbon PEGylated bridge. The yield of PEGylated protein is high, and tertiary structure and biological activity are retained.
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