4.7 Article

Exploration of 6-methyl-7-(Hetero)Aryl-7-Deazapurine ribonucleosides as antileishmanial agents

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 237, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2022.114367

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201708440366]
  2. FWO [G013118 N]
  3. Hercules Foundation [AUGE/17/22 ?]
  4. University of Antwerp [TT-ZAPBOF 33049]

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Leishmaniasis is a disease that causes high mortality and morbidity in tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, Asia, the Americas, and southern Europe. Limited resources are allocated for antileishmanial drug discovery. A study found that by interfering with the purine salvage pathway, a purine analogue can selectively hinder the growth and survival of the Leishmania parasite.
Leishmaniasis causes high mortality and morbidity in tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, Asia, the Americas and southern Europe, and is characterized by diverse clinical manifestations. As a neglected tropical disease, limited resources are allocated for antileishmanial drug discovery. The Leishmania parasite is deficient in de novo purine synthesis, and therefore acquires purines from the host and processes these using a purine salvage pathway. By making use of purine transport systems and interfering with this salvage pathway, purine (nucleoside) analogues might exert a selective detrimental impact on its growth and survival. In vitro screening of an in-house purine nucleoside library and analogue synthesis afforded the 6-methyl-7-(2-pyridyl)-7-deazapurine ribonucleoside analogue 18 as a promising hit. Optimization of the 7-substituent afforded 31 and 32 which displayed potent activity against wild-type and resistant L. infantum, intracellular amastigote and extracellular promastigote forms, and favorable selectivity versus primary mouse macrophages (M phi) and MRC-5 cells. Encouraged by the favorable in vitro metabolic stability of 32, an in vivo study was performed using an early curative L. infantum hamster model. When orally administrated at 50 mg/kg once daily (s.i.d) for 10 days, 32 was devoid of side effects, however, it only poorly reduced amastigote burdens in the major target organs.

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