| Literature DB >> 21411013 |
Abstract
Malaria continues to be an enormous global health challenge, with millions of new infections and deaths reported annually. This is partly due to the development of resistance by the malaria parasite to the majority of established anti-malarial drugs, a situation that continues to hamper attempts at controlling the disease. This has spurred intensive drug discovery endeavours geared towards identifying novel, highly active anti-malarial drugs, and the identification of quality leads from natural sources would greatly augment these efforts. The current reality is that other than compounds that have their foundation in historic natural products, there are no other compounds in drug discovery as part of lead optimization projects and preclinical development or further that have originated from a natural product start-point in recent years. This paper briefly presents both classical as well as some more modern, but underutilized, approaches that have been applied outside the field of malaria, and which could be considered in enhancing the potential of natural products to provide or inspire the development of anti-malarial lead compounds.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21411013 PMCID: PMC3059460 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-S1-S2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1A: structure of artemisinin; B: salinosporamide A, an antimalarial compound isolated from marine actinomycetes; C: an example of a highly active trioxaquine; D: febrifugine, isofebrifugine, metabolite feb-A and its synthetic analog isofeb-A, the arene oxide metabolite and examples of potent but less hepatotoxic halogenated febrifugine analogs; E: Halofuginone, as well as some highly active febrifugine analogs identified by virtual screening; F: NTID609, an extremely active and highly promising anti-malarial spiroindolone.
Figure 2Development of leads from natural products.