Systematic search for benzimidazole compounds and derivatives with antileishmanial effects

Leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease that currently affects 12 million people, and over 1 billion people are at risk of infection. Current chemotherapeutic approaches used to treat this disease are unsatisfactory, and the limitations of these drugs highlight the necessity to develop treatme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular diversity 2018-11, Vol.22 (4), p.779-790
Hauptverfasser: Sánchez-Salgado, Juan Carlos, Bilbao-Ramos, Pablo, Dea-Ayuela, María Auxiliadora, Hernández-Luis, Francisco, Bolás-Fernández, Francisco, Medina-Franco, José L., Rojas-Aguirre, Yareli
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease that currently affects 12 million people, and over 1 billion people are at risk of infection. Current chemotherapeutic approaches used to treat this disease are unsatisfactory, and the limitations of these drugs highlight the necessity to develop treatments with improved efficacy and safety. To inform the rational design and development of more efficient therapies, the present study reports a chemoinformatic approach using the ChEMBL database to retrieve benzimidazole as a target scaffold. Our analysis revealed that a limited number of studies had investigated the antileishmanial effects of benzimidazoles. Among this limited number, L. major was the species most commonly used to evaluate the antileishmanial effects of these compounds, whereas L. amazonensis and L. braziliensis were used least often in the reported studies. The antileishmanial activities of benzimidazole derivatives were notably variable, a fact that may depend on the substitution pattern of the scaffold. In addition, we investigated the effects of a benzimidazole derivative on promastigotes and amastigotes of L. infantum and L. amazonensis using a novel fluorometric method. Significant antileishmanial effects were observed on both species, with L. amazonensis being the most sensitive. To the best of our knowledge, this chemoinformatic analysis represents the first attempt to determine the relevance of benzimidazole scaffolds for antileishmanial drug discovery using the ChEMBL database. The present findings will provide relevant information for future structure–activity relationship studies and for the investigation of benzimidazole-derived drugs as potential treatments for leishmaniasis.
ISSN:1381-1991
1573-501X
DOI:10.1007/s11030-018-9830-7