Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • antitumor (1)
  • human cells (1)
  • humans (1)
  • plants (1)
  • quinolines (4)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Infective diseases have become health threat of a global proportion due to appearance and spread of microorganisms resistant to majority of therapeutics currently used for their treatment. Therefore, there is a constant need for development of new antimicrobial agents, as well as novel therapeutic strategies. Quinolines and quinolones, isolated from plants, animals, and microorganisms, have demonstrated numerous biological activities such as antimicrobial, insecticidal, anti-inflammatory, antiplatelet, and antitumor. For more than two centuries quinoline/quinolone moiety has been used as a scaffold for drug development and even today it represents an inexhaustible inspiration for design and development of novel semi-synthetic or synthetic agents exhibiting broad spectrum of bioactivities. The structural diversity of synthetized compounds provides high and selective activity attained through different mechanisms of action, as well as low toxicity on human cells. This review describes quinoline and quinolone derivatives with antibacterial, antifungal, anti-virulent, antiviral, and anti-parasitic activities with the focus on the last 10 years literature.

    Citation

    Lidija Senerovic, Dejan Opsenica, Ivana Moric, Ivana Aleksic, Marta Spasić, Branka Vasiljevic. Quinolines and Quinolones as Antibacterial, Antifungal, Anti-virulence, Antiviral and Anti-parasitic Agents. Advances in experimental medicine and biology. 2020;1282:37-69

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 31515709

    View Full Text