The antibiotics have been useful in our battles against infectious bacteria and fungi for over 50 years. However, many antibiotics
are used commercially, or are potentially useful, in medicine for activities other than their antibiotic action. They are
used as antitumor agents, immunosuppressive agents, hypocholesterolemic agents, enzyme inhibitors, antimigraine agents, and
antiparasitic agents. A number of these products were first discovered as antibiotics which failed in their development as
such, or as mycotoxins. In addition to the above alternative applications, new powerful antibiotics have been discovered and
commercialized in recent years and others are in clinical testing at the moment. A few successful secondary metabolites appear
to have no antibiotic activity. The recently increased development of resistance to older antibacterial and antifungal drugs
is being met with the use or clinical testing of older, underutilized or previously nondeveloped narrow-spectrum antibacterial
products as well as powerful semisynthetic antifungal agents.
Received: 28 December 1998 / Received revision: 26 April 1999 / Accepted: 1 May 1999