Anti-infection


Anti-infectives are agents that eliminate or inhibit the spread of infectious organisms, encompassing antibiotics, antifungals, antivirals, and antiprotozoals.
Antibiotics are a class of antimicrobial agents specifically designed to target bacterial pathogens. They exert their effects by interfering with essential bacterial processes such as cell wall synthesis, protein synthesis, nucleic acid replication, and metabolic pathways, thereby either inhibiting bacterial growth or inducing bacterial death.
Antifungals are antimicrobial agents employed to combat fungal infections (mycoses) in humans and animals. Common antifungal classes include azoles, polyenes, echinocandins, and allylamines, which function by disrupting unique fungal structures or pathways, such as the synthesis or integrity of ergosterol-containing cell membranes and β-glucan-based cell walls, or by interfering with nucleic acid or protein synthesis.
Antivirals are compounds developed to inhibit the replication and spread of viruses within host organisms. Antivirals typically act by blocking viral entry, genome replication, protein processing, or virion assembly and release. Representative examples include nucleoside analogs, protease inhibitors, and neuraminidase inhibitors.
Antiprotozoals are drugs used to treat infections caused by protozoan parasites, including malaria, amebiasis, giardiasis, and trypanosomiasis. They act through a variety of mechanisms, including inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis, interference with mitochondrial function, and disruption of heme detoxification pathways in susceptible parasites.
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N1393 3-Hydroxy-4-methoxycinnamic acid -
N1395 Dendrobine -
N1500 Germacrone -
N1521 Dehydrodiisoeugenol -
N1531 Betulinaldehyde -
N1539 Patchouli alcohol -
N1555 Lycorine chloride -
N1567 DaphnetinSummary: Protein kinases inhibitor for EGFR/PKA/PKC -
N1579 GlabridinSummary: Prenylated isoflavonoid with various bioactivities -
N1619 Ginsenoside Rb2

