If you’re on the prescription drug Zoloft, it’s a good thing
you’re not a fungus! Scientists
experimenting with the effects of the best-selling anti depressant have discovered
that the well—known pharmaceutical has a major toxic effect on yeast cells. It distorts their normally curved membranes
and triggers the cell to start eating themselves. According to pharmacologist Ethan Pearlstein
of Princeton University, yeast doesn’t have any serotonin, so there’s no reason
to expect any effect, let alone such a bizarre suicidal one. According to Pearlstein, a molecule of Zoloft
“…should be completely innocuous to a yeast cell, the way an antibiotic would
be innocuous to a viral infection”. What
exactly the clinical implication are, of this self destructive response to Zoloft,
for patients taking the drug, remains to be seen, but the unexpected findings
has pharmacologists salivating at the prospect of new targets for the next
generation of anti-depressants. In the words of author Pearlstein: “Altogether, our work suggests that the
serotonin-based theory might be an oversimplification and that the cause of
depression is not a closed story.”
The question of whether or not this toxic effect on yeast can make Zoloft
an effective anti-fungal agent has not yet been addressed, but it may be
something that pharmaceutical companies will be looking into for future
research. In a paper published in the
journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, doctors describe the fungicidal effects
of Zoloft on three patients being treated for depression with concomitant vaginal
yeast infections. Apparently all three
patients experienced improvements in symptoms associated with their fungal
infections while taking the anti-depressant medication. The researchers concluded: “The potential offered by sertraline (Zoloft)
against fungi is sufficiently great to merit further studies by investigators
in the field of infectious diseases…To support potential systemic use, animal
models and clinical trials are highly warranted.”