Sandbox 123456

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The primary component of Noxafil, <scene name='75/756730/Posaconazole/1'>posaconazole</scene> is a potent, broad-spectrum antifungal drug. It was derived from a similar triazole antifungal agent, Itraconazole. The differences in structure are that the chlorine substituents in the aromatic ring on the left-hand side of the images are replaces with fluorines and that the triazolone sidechain is hydroxylated in the posaconazole structure<ref name="drugbank">Posaconazole. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.drugbank.ca/drugs/DB01263
The primary component of Noxafil, <scene name='75/756730/Posaconazole/1'>posaconazole</scene> is a potent, broad-spectrum antifungal drug. It was derived from a similar triazole antifungal agent, Itraconazole. The differences in structure are that the chlorine substituents in the aromatic ring on the left-hand side of the images are replaces with fluorines and that the triazolone sidechain is hydroxylated in the posaconazole structure<ref name="drugbank">Posaconazole. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.drugbank.ca/drugs/DB01263
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Accession Number: DB01263 </ref>. The extended side chain residues and hydrophobic contacts enhances antifungal activity by allowing tighter binding affinities to the <scene name='75/756730/Hemegroup2/1'>heme cofactor</scene> in the active site of the CYP450-dependent enzyme lanosterol alpha-demthylase (<scene name='75/756730/Cyp51/1'>CYP51</scene>) <ref name="groll">doi:10.1586/14787210.3.4.467</ref><ref>doi: 10.1086/523576</ref>. The tighter binding affinity of posaconazole makes it less susceptible to be affected by mutations in the enzyme resulting in resistance of fungi <ref name="formularyjournal">Sircar-Ramsewak,, F., Nicolau, D. P., & Kuti, J. L. (2005). Focus on posaconazole: A novel triazole antifungal for the treatment of invasive fungal infections. Formulary Journal - Modern Medicine Network </ref>. The entirety of the scene shows the crystal <scene name='75/756730/Structure/1'>structure</scene> of sterol 14-alpha demethylase (CYP51) from a pathogenic yeast Candida albicans in complex with the antifungal drug posaconazole
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Accession Number: DB01263 </ref>. The extended side chain residues and hydrophobic contacts enhances antifungal activity by allowing tighter binding affinities to the <scene name='75/756730/Hemegroup2/1'>heme cofactor</scene> in the active site of the CYP450-dependent enzyme 14-alpha-demthylase (<scene name='75/756730/Cyp51/1'>CYP51</scene>) <ref name="groll">doi:10.1586/14787210.3.4.467</ref><ref>doi: 10.1086/523576</ref>. The tighter binding affinity of posaconazole makes it less susceptible to be affected by mutations in the enzyme resulting in resistance of fungi <ref name="formularyjournal">Sircar-Ramsewak,, F., Nicolau, D. P., & Kuti, J. L. (2005). Focus on posaconazole: A novel triazole antifungal for the treatment of invasive fungal infections. Formulary Journal - Modern Medicine Network </ref>. The entirety of the scene shows the crystal <scene name='75/756730/Structure/1'>structure</scene> of sterol 14-alpha demethylase (CYP51) from a pathogenic yeast Candida albicans in complex with the antifungal drug posaconazole

Revision as of 21:14, 19 April 2017

PDB ID: 5FSA

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