Agents that Inhibit Bacterial Biofilm Formation

Nira Rabin(University of Maryland, College Park), Yue Zheng(University of Maryland, College Park), Clement Opoku‐Temeng(University of Maryland, College Park), Yixuan Du(University of Maryland, College Park), Eric Bonsu(Bowie State University), Herman O. Sintim(University of Maryland, College Park)
Future Medicinal Chemistry
April 1, 2015
Cited by 269

Abstract

In the biofilm form, bacteria are more resistant to various antimicrobial treatments. Bacteria in a biofilm can also survive harsh conditions and withstand the host's immune system. Therefore, there is a need for new treatment options to treat biofilm-associated infections. Currently, research is focused on the development of antibiofilm agents that are nontoxic, as it is believed that such molecules will not lead to future drug resistance. In this review, we discuss recent discoveries of antibiofilm agents and different approaches to inhibit/disperse biofilms. These new antibiofilm agents, which contain moieties such as imidazole, phenols, indole, triazole, sulfide, furanone, bromopyrrole, peptides, etc. have the potential to disperse bacterial biofilms in vivo and could positively impact human medicine in the future.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis