| Over a  billion people are affected by fungal infections every year, ranging in severity from topical  skin conditions like athlete's foot to life-threatening fungal blood infections. The  infection is more likely to occur when the body's immune system is compromised  due to an illness like HIV/AIDS, cancer or when receiving antibiotic treatment.  There is a pressing need to develop efficient and disease-specific antifungal agents to mitigate  this growing drug resistance problem. Traditional antifungal therapeutics need  to get inside the cell to attack the infection but have trouble targeting and  penetrating the fungi  membrane wall. Also, since fungi are metabolically similar to mammalian  cells, existing drugs can have trouble differentiating between healthy and  infected cells. Recognizing this, IBM scientists applied an organic catalytic  process to facilitate the transformation  of PET (waste), into entirely new molecules that can be transformed into  antifungal agents. Researchers at Singapore's Institute of Bioengineering and  Nanotechnology (IBN) and California's IBM Research -Almaden (IBM) have  unveiled a nanomedicine  breakthrough in common plastics like polyethylene terephthalate (PET) that  can be converted into non-toxic  and biocompatible materials designed to specifically target and attack  fungal infections.  This is significant  as plastic bottles are typically recycled by mechanical grounding and can  mostly be reused only in secondary products like clothes, carpeting or  playground equipment. These new antifungal agents self-assemble through a hydrogen-bonding process,  sticking to each other like molecular Velcro in a polymer-like fashion to form  nanofibers. This is  important because these antifungal agents are only active as a therapeutic in  the fiber or polymer-like form. This novel nanofiber carries a positive charge  and can selectively target and attach to only the negatively-charged fungal  membranes based on electrostatic interaction. It then breaks through and  destroys the fungal cell  membrane walls, preventing it from developing resistance.
 According  to Dr Yi Yan Yang, Group Leader, IBN, "The ability of these molecules to  self-assemble into nanofibers is important because unlike discrete molecules,  fibers increase the local concentration of cationic charges and compound mass.  This facilitates the targeting of the fungal membrane and its subsequent lysis,  enabling the fungi to be destroyed at low concentrations." Leveraging IBM  Research's computational capabilities, the researchers simulated the antifungal  assemblies, predicting which structural modifications would create the desired  therapeutic efficacy. "As computational predictive methodologies continue  to advance, we can begin to establish ground rules for self assembly to design  complex therapeutics to fight infections as well as the effective  encapsulation, transport and delivery of a wide variety of cargos to their  targeted diseased sites," said Dr. James Hedrick, Advanced Organic  Materials Scientist, IBM Research. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)  of the nanofibers, which is the lowest concentration that inhibits the visible  growth of fungi, demonstrated strong antifungal activity against multiple types  of fungal infections. In further studies conducted by Singapore's IBN, testing  showed the nanofibers eradicated more than 99.9% of C. albicans, a fungal infection causing the third most common  blood stream infection in the United States, after a single hour of incubation  and indicated no resistance after 11 treatments. Conventional antifungal drugs  were only able to suppress additional fungal growth while the infection  exhibited drug  resistance after  six treatments. 
      Additional  findings of this research indicated the nanofibers effectively dispersed fungal  biofilms after  one-time treatment while conventional antifungal  drugs were  not effective against biofilms. The in vivo antifungal activity of the  nanofibers was also evaluated in a mouse model using a contact lens-associated  C. albicans biofilm infection. The nanofibers significantly decreased the  number of fungi, hindered new fungal structure growth in the cornea and reduced  the severity of existing eye inflammation. These experiments also showed  mammalian cells survived long after incubation with the nanofibers, indicating  excellent in vitro biocompatibility. In addition, no significant tissue erosion  is observed in the mouse cornea after topical application of the nanofibers.
 
 In recent years, the number of opportunistic fungal infections has increased  due to growing populations of patients with weakened immune systems, for  example due to cancer, organ transplant or HIV/AIDS. In such patients, invasive  infections caused by Candida, Aspergillus  and Cryptococcus  neoformans (C. neoformans) fungi strains may take the form of  potentially lethal blood stream infections, lung infections and  meningitis. Candida, for example, causes candidiasis, which is the  fourth most common fungal blood stream infection among hospitalized patients in  the United States according to the Centers for Disease Control &  Prevention. BCC Research reported that the treatment cost for fungal infections  was US$3 bln worldwide in 2010 and is expected to increase to US$6 bln in  2014. Of great concern to the clinical and healthcare communities is the rise in fungal infections,  which are resistant to conventional antifungal drugs, as well as increasing  reports of resistance development in patients toward antifungal agents. These  trends necessitate the urgent development of suitable alternatives to the  limited selection of available antifungal agents. Further, most conventional  antifungal agents do not completely destroy the fungi but merely inhibit their  growth, which may lead to future infections. A particular challenge facing  researchers lies in fungi's metabolic similarity to mammalian cells. Existing  antifungal agents are unable to distinguish between infected and healthy cells,  and frequently end up attacking the latter. Hence, patients commonly report  hemolysis and nephrotoxicity as treatment side effects. Leveraging IBM's  polymer synthesis and computational expertise, as well as IBN's nanomedicine and biomaterials  research expertise, the researchers transformed PET, a common plastic material,  into novel small molecule compounds that self-assemble in water into nanofibers.  Via electrostatic interaction, the nanofibers are able to selectively target  fungal cells and penetrate their membrane, killing them in the process. The IBN  and IBM scientists have made other recent breakthroughs in antimicrobial  research. By combining their antimicrobial polymers with conventional  antibiotics or antifungal drugs, they were able to induce the formation of  pores in microbial membranes, which promotes the penetration of antibiotics  into the microbial cells, and kills highly infectious, drug-resistant P.  aeruginosa at significantly lower concentrations when compared to the  antimicrobial polymers and antibiotics alone. In addition, the researchers  have also fine-tuned their biodegradable antimicrobial polycarbonates to  produce polymers with strong and broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity and  negligible toxicity to mammals.
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