| Literature DB >> 21968362 |
Laura M Sanz1, M Belen Jiménez-Díaz, Benigno Crespo, Cristina De-Cozar, M Jesus Almela, Iñigo Angulo-Barturen, Pablo Castañeda, Javier Ibañez, Esther Pilar Fernández, Santiago Ferrer, Esperanza Herreros, Sonia Lozano, María Santos Martínez, Lourdes Rueda, Jeremy N Burrows, Jose F García-Bustos, Francisco-Javier Gamo.
Abstract
Malaria is one of the deadliest infectious diseases in the world, with the eukaryotic parasite Plasmodium falciparum causing the most severe form of the disease. Discovery of new classes of antimalarial drugs has become an urgent task to counteract the increasing problem of drug resistance. Screening directly for compounds able to inhibit parasite growth in vitro is one of the main approaches the malaria research community is now pursuing for the identification of novel antimalarial drug leads. Very recently, thousands of compounds with potent activity against the parasite P. falciparum have been identified and information about their molecular descriptors, antiplasmodial potency, and cytotoxicity is publicly available. Now the challenges are how to identify the most promising chemotypes for further development and how best to progress these compounds through a lead optimization program to generate antimalarial drug candidates. We report here the first chemical series to be characterized from one of those screenings, a completely novel chemical class with the generic name cyclopropyl carboxamides that has never before been described as having antimalarial or other pharmacological activities. Cyclopropyl carboxamides are potent inhibitors of drug-sensitive and -resistant strains of P. falciparum in vitro and show in vivo oral efficacy in malaria mouse models. In the present work, we describe the biological characterization of this chemical family, showing that inhibition of their still unknown target has very favorable pharmacological consequences but the compounds themselves seem to select for resistance at a high frequency.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21968362 PMCID: PMC3232824 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.05188-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191