New Compounds with Bioisosteric Replacement of Classic Choline Kinase Inhibitors Show Potent Antiplasmodial Activity
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Aguilar-Troyano, Francisco José; Rubbini, Gianluca; Fasiolo, Alberto; Luque Navarro, Pilar María; Carrasco Jiménez, María Paz; Pérez Moreno, Guiomar; Bosch-Navarrete, Cristina; González Pacanowska, Dolores; López Cara, Luisa CarlotaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Antimalarial drug Choline kinase inhibition
Date
2021-11-02Referencia bibliográfica
Aguilar-Troyano, F.J.; Torretta, A.; Rubbini, G.; Fasiolo, A.; Luque-Navarro, P.M.; Carrasco- Jimenez, M.P.; Pérez-Moreno, G.; Bosch-Navarrete, C.; González- Pacanowska, D.; Parisini, E.; et al. New Compounds with Bioisosteric Replacement of Classic Choline Kinase Inhibitors Show Potent Antiplasmodial Activity. Pharmaceutics 2021, 13, 1842. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics 13111842
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PID2019–109294RB-I00; University of Granada CEI2013-MP-1; Plan Nacional (SAF PID2019-109623RB-I002016-79957-R); Junta de Andalucía (BIO-199); Instituto de Salud Carlos III (RICET: RD16/0027/0014)Résumé
In the fight against Malaria, new strategies need to be developed to avoid resistance of
the parasite to pharmaceutics and other prevention barriers. Recently, a Host Directed Therapy
approach based on the suppression of the starting materials uptake from the host by the parasite
has provided excellent results. In this article, we propose the synthesis of bioisosteric compounds
that are capable of inhibiting Plasmodium falciparum Choline Kinase and therefore to reduce choline
uptake, which is essential for the development of the parasite. Of the 41 bioisosteric compounds
reported herein, none showed any influence of the linker on the antimalarial and enzyme inhibitory
activity, whereas an effect of the type of cationic heads used could be observed. SARs determined
that the thienopyrimidine substituted in 4 by a pyrrolidine is the best scaffold, independently of
the chosen linker. The decrease in lipophilicity seems to improve the antimalarial activity but to
cause an opposite effect on the inhibition of the enzyme. While potent compounds with similar good
inhibitory values have been related to the proposed mechanism of action, some of them still show
discrepancies and further studies are needed to determine their specific molecular target.