Medical Hypotheses
Volume 67, Issue 2 , Pages 359-361, 2006

Antimicrobial drugs that target human – not microbial – genotypes or phenotypes: A paradigm change in human evolutionary response to pathogen selection pressure

Chemologic LLC, NA, 2313 welch place, Mansfield, TX 76063, USA

Received 20 January 2006; accepted 25 January 2006. published online 17 March 2006.

Summary 

Conventional antimicrobial drugs that target microbial life processes impose a selection pressure on pathogens and attenuate pathogen imposed selection pressure on human hosts. The simultaneous increase and decrease that result in pathogen and human host evolvability/adaptability, respectively, distorts the natural Darwinian evolutionary process. Such drugs may create an aberrant Darwinian genotype in human hosts that is ill prepared to resist emerging virulent pathogenic strains in the event of a decrease in host ontogenic potential. In contrast, antimicrobial drugs that target host human genes exert a selective pressure both on the human genome (without population decimation) as well as on pathogenic microbes. Such drugs maintain the evolvability/adaptability of the host in tandem with that of the pathogens in the context of Darwinian evolution. Such drugs retain the capacity of the human host to evolve genotypes that may confer resistance to future pathogenic microbial strains, to assimilate prokaryotic endosymbionts and to increase the probability of survival in the event of a decrease in host ontogenic potential.

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PII: S0306-9877(06)00105-8

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2006.01.043

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 67, Issue 2 , Pages 359-361, 2006