Mark
Wainwright
School of Pharmacy & Biomolecular Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool L3 3AF, UK. E-mail: mark_wainwright@hotmail.com
The use of a separate nomenclature for the application of photosensitisers to the oncological and infectious disease fields represents a sensible approach. There is commonality, of course, in that both utilise light activation and act via the local generation of reactive oxygen species, but the difference in cellular targets is so great that different designs are required to achieve proper selectivity for a clinical end use, whether in human or veterinary medicine. The following represents a personal view, and perhaps a clarification of terms, in what might be considered a major etymological dichotomy existing within photodynamic research, on the 20th anniversary of “PACT”.
Firstly, it was an attempt to gather together and consolidate as much of the light-activated antimicrobial research that had been reported in the recent past, as a “leading edge” piece. Secondly, and very importantly from my point of view, it was intended to provide an easily-recalled acronym which was distinct from the abbreviation PDT, used for the photodynamic therapy of cancer, which, at the time, massively overshadowed the nascent antimicrobial application.
The rationale behind the nomenclature was relatively straightforward: photodynamic due to light-activated production of reactive oxygen species; antimicrobial to specify action against microbial pathogens and emphasise utility in infection control, and chemotherapy because the main photosensitisers used also exhibited minor conventional (‘dark’) activity against microbes. This last part has been a problem for some, who prefer the purist idea that photodynamic therapy employs photosensitisers which are wholly non-toxic without light (never true, in my experience), and this has led to a number of alternative abbreviations – there have been no other acronyms.
‘Chemotherapy’ (Ger. chemotherapie) is a term coined by its inventor, Paul Ehrlich, in the early years of the last century. The word evolved from his discovery that certain dyes were able initially to kill or inactivate microbial cells or cultures, and later to cure infectious disease in small animals, and then humans. The use of the word in conventional terms thus originally comes from clinical antimicrobial chemotherapy, rather than from the use of chemical agents against tumours, which began in the mid-20th Century.
Conventional anticancer chemotherapy is aimed at the killing of human tumour cells and, due to lower than desirable selectivity for tumour over healthy cells, significant side effects are often experienced. I would suggest that this is the main reason that the word chemotherapy is remembered and associated with cancer, rather than the much more widely-used – and milder – antimicrobial application.
Photoantimicrobial chemotherapy, as noted above, reflects the small, conventional, ‘dark’ toxicity associated with major photosensitisers such as methylene blue or toluidine blue, but this is toxicity against the target organisms, rather than host cells. It is up to those involved in the area to ensure that those governing the clinical transfer of the approach appreciate this, but the use of intentionally anticancer PDT agents as notional photoantimicrobials does nothing to support the argument.
While it is true that the killing agents involved in photodynamic processes are reactive oxygen species, these would not be produced without the photosensitiser. Indeed, the fact that methylene blue and toluidine blue may be effluxed from target cells and yet kill these cells on illumination2 is testament to this. Such phenomena do not occur with conventional therapeutics.
The use of the compound word photoantimicrobial within my original review – i.e. a specific agent which is antimicrobial on illumination, as opposed to being a general photosensitiser – was a similar attempt to separate the active compounds used in the light-activated antimicrobial and anticancer fields and allow the proper distinction of those working with the former. While this may not seem important, I believe not only that it was in the late 1990s, but also that it remains so now – the anticancer and infection control applications should be well separated. One of the major problems with the use of photosensitiser preparations, such as haematoporphyrin derivative (HpD), in the mid-late 1990s (and later!) was a lack of selectivity between the target tumour and surrounding healthy tissue. Healthy host cell uptake in cancer treatment may be justified, but it is far less so in the therapy of infectious disease. Furthermore, the compounds which originally encouraged work in this field were small molecule, hydrophilic dyes such as the acridine proflavine, the triphenylmethane brilliant green and the phenothiazinium methylene blue. Each of these dyes has been used, clinically, in antisepsis, without the intentional use of light.
This is not to say that there should be no crossover at all between the two disciplines – obviously both require photosensitiser development and both need to understand and minimise toxic effects on the host – but my view has always been that they have quite different objectives and should thus be treated as separate entities.
It should be noted that PACT is often now shortened to the slightly less cumbersome photoantimicrobial chemotherapy.
Perhaps a more important point against the use of the APDT abbreviation lies in the fact that the minor conventional toxicity of photoantimicrobials like methylene blue or toluidine blue is far less significant in mammalian cells than it is in microbes. Furthermore, the degree of this inherent or ‘dark’ microbial toxicity is not really of concern unless it is of a significance which would be detrimental to the approach as a whole, given eventual resistance. As an example, it must be incorrect to call the enhanced action of conventional fluoroquinolone antibacterials on illumination “APDT”, since here the dark toxicity is considerable and is, indeed, the main route to cell killing, the photodynamic action being a fortunate extra. What is required from the photoantimicrobial approach is high activity against the microbial target with insignificant damage to the host in either light or dark conditions.
An earlier abbreviation concerning the anticancer application of photosensitisers was PCT, for photochemotherapy. This, again, was a realistic admission of its chemotherapeutic nature – the use of chemical agents which were activated by light. This has similarities to conventional radiosensitisation, but was also close to the phrase ‘photochemical therapy’, properly employed where the incoming radiation causes the formation of new covalent bonds between the therapeutic molecule and its target (typically a UV-activated furanocoumarin and DNA). There is, of course, considerable discussion as to whether, or where, the line should be drawn between this type of photochemistry and that leading to the generation of reactive oxygen species. However, photochemotherapy is also a fitting general description for either the anticancer or the antimicrobial approach, in the same way as there are both anticancer and antimicrobial chemotherapies in conventional healthcare.
Other abbreviations have appeared at various times: PDD for photodynamic disinfection and PDI for photodynamic inactivation. I have yet to encounter PDC, to cover photodecolonisation, but it will arrive, have no doubt! These are, again, not fully interchangeable terms, but are used with apparent abandon by various groups – typically in early publications.
As pointed out to me recently, the term disinfection has different meanings depending on the language used. Normally (in English) it is meant to describe the cleaning of pathogens from a surface, very often part of the physical environment – commercial disinfectants are usually surface cleaners. Also photodisinfection might mean the use of ionising radiation alone (typically ultraviolet) to kill microbes. However, since a wound can be disinfected, there is potential for confusion here.
Similarly, inactivation in terms of a pathogenic microbe might mean cell killing or the inhibition of cell replication, but is the correct term if viruses are the target, the conventional argument, of course, being that viruses are not living and thus cannot be killed.
Conventional microbial toxicity is certainly present with the phenothiazinium photosensitisers mentioned here. If other photoantimicrobials are completely non-toxic, as is often claimed, this would clearly represent an improvement in molecular properties which should speed progress to the clinic, and should therefore be promoted. However, such claimants would do well to be completely certain of their data regarding dark toxicity before regulatory submission.
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