Litcius/Paper detail

Naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids, validated as hit multistage antiplasmodial natural products

Phanankosi Moyo, William Shamburger, Mariëtte van der Watt, Janette Reader, Ana Carolina C. de Sousa, Timothy J. Egan, Vinesh Maharaj, Gerhard Bringmann, Lyn‐Marié Birkholtz

2020International Journal for Parasitology Drugs and Drug Resistance27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

values <1 μM against drug-sensitive P. falciparum parasites (NF54 strain); 15 of these retained activity against a panel of drug-resistant strains. These compounds showed low in vitro cytotoxicity against HepG2 cells, with selectivity indices of >10. The tested compounds showed activity in vitro against both early- and late-stage P. falciparum gametocytes while blocking male gamete formation (>70% inhibition of exflagellation at 2 μM). Additionally, five selected compounds were found to have good solubility (≥170 μM in PBS at pH 6.5), while metabolic stability towards human, mouse, and rat microsomes ranged from >90% to >7% after 30 min. Dioncophylline C (2a) emerged as a front runner from the study, displaying activity against both asexual parasites and gametocytes, a lack of cross-resistance to chloroquine, good solubility, and microsomal stability. Overall, this is the first report on the multistage activity of NIQs and their synthetic analogues including gametocytocidal and gametocidal effects induced by this class of compounds.

Topics & Concepts

GametocytePlasmodium falciparumMalariaDrugIn vitroBiologyPharmacologyChloroquineIC50Drug resistanceMicrosomeBiochemistryMicrobiologyImmunologyMalaria Research and ControlTraditional and Medicinal Uses of AnnonaceaeSynthesis and Biological Activity