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This volume is the third in the series devoted to Antibiotics
initiated by Springer Verlag in 1967. The first two volumes were
devoted to the Mode of Action of Antibiotics and Biogenesis,
respectively and were received graciously. During the intervening
years these two works have been used often by research workers and
students alike and have been quoted extensively. Although a number
of other excellent treatises on antibiotics have appeared, the
Springer series has set a standard for thoroughness and quality
that meets the need of the scientific community. It is against this
background that the present Editors set about the preparation of a
third volume in the Series on Antibiotics. Since the appearance of
Volume I, also dealing with Mechanism of Action, tremendous strides
have been made in the depth and breadth of our knowledge of
molecular biology, microbial chemistry and molecular pharmacology
and of their direct application to studies on the mode of action of
drugs. The field of molecular biology itself was in its relative
infancy during the preceding decade and the unique role played by
many anti biotics in the development of our understanding of
nucleic acid synthesis and function and its relationship to protein
synthesis and cell physiology has led rapidly to a very precise,
understanding of how many of these same antibiotics inhibit
susceptible cells."
The concept of chemotherapy as originated by Paul Ehrlich is based
on the premise that antiparasitic drugs must have two properties:
they must first bind to specific structures of the parasite which
Ehrlich called chemoreceptors. Subsequent to their attachment to
the chemoreceptor and by virtue of this binding they must possess
the capacity to kill the parasite. Since the host which is to be
cured of an invading parasite also contains a large number of
chemoreceptors, that have the potential to bind toxic compounds,
the task of the chemo therapist is to identify chemoreceptors of
the parasite which are . not represented in the host and to design
drugs which bind selectively to them In this context, Ehrlich
called. for "the complete and exhaustive knowledge of all the
different chemoreceptors of a certain parasite" as a "sine qua non
for success in chemotherapy." Paradoxically and in spite of the
fact that chemotherapy has become a very advanced and successful
therapeutic discipline, few of its tri umphs have been achieved by
following Ehrlich's original precepts. On the contrary, in the
overwhelming majority of cases, effective drugs have been
discovered without any knowledge of their chemoreceptors, and these
drugs themselves have conversely been used as tools to study the
nature of the chemoreceptors involved. In other words: chemother
apy, notably antibacterial chemotherapy, has been successful
without ever living up to the fundamental standards put forward by
Paul Ehr lich."
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