Stress-Activated Protein Kinase Pathways as Potential Targets for the Development of New Antifungals
Rebeca Alonso-Monge, José Pedro Guirao-Abad, Juan Carlos Argüelles

TL;DR
This review explores stress-activated protein kinase pathways as potential targets for new antifungal therapies to combat dangerous fungal pathogens.
Contribution
The paper highlights SAPK pathways as novel antifungal targets due to their absence in humans and role in fungal virulence and drug resistance.
Findings
SAPK pathways are crucial for virulence in priority fungal pathogens like Cryptococcus neoformans and Candida auris.
SAPK signaling is activated in response to antifungals, suggesting a role in drug resistance.
Combining SAPK modulators with antifungal drugs may improve treatment efficacy.
Abstract
The World Health Organization WHO considers fungal infections as a significant global risk that necessitates the development of new therapies. The arsenal of antifungals is limited, and the eukaryotic organization of fungi makes it difficult to find selective antifungal targets. In the search for potential targets for the design of new antifungals, the Stress-Activated Protein Kinase (SAPKs) pathways, and specifically, the two-component system, could be a plausible option since this upstream signaling system is absent in metazoans. SAPK pathways are involved in the response and adaptation to different environmental conditions. In pathogenic fungi, these signaling pathways are crucial for virulence, and some of them become activated in response to certain antifungals. Although further experimental evidence is required on the role of SAPKs in antifungal signaling and resistance, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntifungal resistance and susceptibility · Fungal and yeast genetics research · Fungal Infections and Studies
