The Tuberculosis Drug Candidate SQ109 and Its Analogs Have Multistage Activity against Plasmodium falciparum

Toward repositioning the antitubercular clinical candidate SQ109 as an antimalarial, analogs were investigated for structure–activity relationships for activity against asexual blood stages of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum pathogenic forms, as well as transmissible, sexual stage g...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS infectious diseases 2024-09, Vol.10 (9), p.3358-3367
Hauptverfasser: Watson, Savannah J., van der Watt, Mariëtte E., Theron, Anjo, Reader, Janette, Tshabalala, Sizwe, Erlank, Erica, Koekemoer, Lizette L., Naude, Mariska, Stampolaki, Marianna, Adewole, Feyisola, Sadowska, Katie, Pérez-Lozano, Pilar, Turcu, Andreea L., Vázquez, Santiago, Ko, Jihee, Mazurek, Ben, Singh, Davinder, Malwal, Satish R., Njoroge, Mathew, Chibale, Kelly, Onajole, Oluseye K., Kolocouris, Antonios, Oldfield, Eric, Birkholtz, Lyn-Marié
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Toward repositioning the antitubercular clinical candidate SQ109 as an antimalarial, analogs were investigated for structure–activity relationships for activity against asexual blood stages of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum pathogenic forms, as well as transmissible, sexual stage gametocytes. We show that equipotent activity (IC50) in the 100–300 nM range could be attained for both asexual and sexual stages, with the activity of most compounds retained against a multidrug-resistant strain. The multistage activity profile relies on high lipophilicity ascribed to the adamantane headgroup, and antiplasmodial activity is critically dependent on the diamine linker. Frontrunner compounds showed conserved activity against genetically diverse southern African clinical isolates. We additionally validated that this series could block transmission to mosquitoes, marking these compounds as novel chemotypes with multistage antiplasmodial activity.
ISSN:2373-8227
2373-8227
DOI:10.1021/acsinfecdis.4c00461