4.5 Article

Well-Tolerated Amphotericin B Derivatives That Effectively Treat Visceral Leishmaniasis

Journal

ACS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 7, Issue 8, Pages 2472-2482

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.1c00245

Keywords

Leishmania; amphotericin; methyltransferase; sterols; resistance; next-generation sequencing

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN 167289, PJT 148611]
  2. Fondation du CHU de Quebec
  3. Canadian Foundation to Innovation
  4. National Institutes of Health [NIAID AI135812-03]

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Chemotherapy for visceral leishmaniasis is limited, with liposomal Amphotericin B emerging as a first-line drug in many countries despite its cost. Research is focused on finding cheaper and stable formulations of AmB, as well as developing less-toxic derivatives. Two less-toxic AmB derivatives, particularly AmB-MU, show promising efficacy and tolerability in vitro, making them potential candidates for improving treatment of this prevalent parasitic disease.
Chemotherapy against the neglected tropical disease visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is suboptimal with only four licensed drugs. Amphotericin B (AmB), despite its toxicity, remained a second line drug for a long time. However, the demonstration that liposomal AmB is highly effective against VL propelled it, despite its cost, to a first line drug in many countries. While several ongoing efforts are aiming at finding cheaper and stable AmB-formulations, an alternative strategy is the development of less-toxic AmB derivatives. We show here that two less-toxic AmB derivatives with the carboxylate at position 16 of AmB derivatized to a methyl urea (AmB-MU) or amino urea (AmB-AU) are active in vitro against Leishmania donovani, both as free-living parasites as well as their intracellular form. Both less-toxic derivatives, similarly to AmB, target the ergosterol pathway of L. donovani. While the AmB-AU derivative showed female-specific liver toxicity in vivo, the AmB-MU derivative was well-tolerated and more effective than AmB against experimental VL. These studies are an important step for improving AmB-based therapy against a prevalent parasitic disease.

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