Title
Structure-activity relationship of new antimalarial 1-aryl-3-susbtituted propanol derivatives: Synthesis, preliminary toxicity profiling, parasite life cycle stage studies, target exploration, and targeted delivery
Date Issued
25 May 2018
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Pabón A.
Moles E.
Bonilla-Ramirez L.
Fabing I.
Fong K.Y.
Nieto-Aco D.A.
Wright D.W.
Pizarro J.C.
Vettorazzi A.
López de Cerain A.
Deharo E.
Fernández-Busquets X.
Garavito G.
Aldana I.
Galiano S.
Universidad de Navarra
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Masson SAS
Abstract
Design, synthesis, structure-activity relationship, cytotoxicity studies, in silico drug-likeness, genotoxicity screening, and in vivo studies of new 1-aryl-3-substituted propanol derivatives led to the identification of nine compounds with promising in vitro (55, 56, 61, 64, 66, and 70–73) and in vivo (66 and 72) antimalarial profiles against Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium berghei. Compounds 55, 56, 61, 64, 66 and 70–73 exhibited potent antiplasmodial activity against chloroquine-resistant strain FCR-3 (IC50s < 0.28 μM), and compounds 55, 56, 64, 70, 71, and 72 showed potent biological activity in chloroquine-sensitive and multidrug-resistant strains (IC50s < 0.7 μM for 3D7, D6, FCR-3 and C235). All of these compounds share appropriate drug-likeness profiles and adequate selectivity indexes (77 < SI < 184) as well as lack genotoxicity. In vivo efficacy tests in a mouse model showed compounds 66 and 72 to be promising candidates as they exhibited significant parasitemia reductions of 96.4% and 80.4%, respectively. Additional studies such as liver stage and sporogony inhibition, target exploration of heat shock protein 90 of P. falciparum, targeted delivery by immunoliposomes, and enantiomer characterization were performed and strongly reinforce the hypothesis of 1-aryl-3-substituted propanol derivatives as promising antimalarial compounds.
Start page
489
End page
514
Volume
152
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Enfermedades infecciosas Parasitología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85046730511
PubMed ID
Source
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
ISSN of the container
02235234
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by PIUNA Project (Universidad of Navarra), Foundation CAN (grant number 70391), Colciencias (grant number 111526934273; contract RC-597-2013), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain (grant BIO2014-52872-R and FEDER funds), Generalitat de Catalunya (grant 2014-SGR-938) and the Instituto de Salud Tropical (ISTUN) of Universidad de Navarra. Miguel Quiliano is grateful to “Programa Nacional de Innovación para la competitividad y productividad” (Innóvate-Perú) for his Ph.D. scholarship (grant 065-FINCYT-BDE-2014). Ernest Moles is grateful to the subprograma de Formación de Personal Investigador of the MINECO for his scholarship. Leonardo Bonilla-Ramirez is funded by Colciencias Grants (grant 528–2011). Diego A. Nieto-Aco was supported by the Instituto General de Investigación of Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería and the Research Experience for Peruvian Undergraduates (REPU) program. ISGlobal and IBEC are members of the CERCA Programme (Generalitat de Catalunya). We thank Cresset company for the academic licensing of Spark™ and Forge™. We thank Dr. Dominique Mazier of the group “Identification and Pre-Clinical Validation of Novel Therapeutic Targets against Malaria” at the Centre d'Immunologie et des Maladies Infectieuses-UPMC for the laboratory facilities to perform the transmission and hepatic phase tests. We thank the Integrated Screening Platform of Toulouse (PICT, IBISA) for the record of the analytical chromatograms using UPC2. We thank the Institut de Chimie de Toulouse (ICT, FR2599) for the preparative chromatograms using Prep80.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus