| Literature DB >> 35320824 |
Rubens Lima do Monte Neto1, Paulo Otávio Lourenço Moreira1, Alessandra Mara de Sousa1, Miguel Antonio do Nascimento Garcia2, Suellen Rodrigues Maran2, Nilmar Silvio Moretti2.
Abstract
Despite the increasing number of manuscripts describing potential alternative antileishmanial compounds, little is advancing on translating these knowledges to new products to treat leishmaniasis. This is in part due to the lack of standardisations during pre-clinical drug discovery stage and also depends on the alignment of goals among universities/research centers, government and pharmaceutical industry. Inspired or not by drug repurposing, metal-based antileishmanial drugs represent a class that deserves more attention on its use for leishmaniasis chemotherapy. Together with new chemical entities, progresses have been made on the knowledge of parasite-specific drug targets specially after using CRISPR/Cas system for functional studies. In this regard, Leishmania parasites undergoe post-translational modification as key regulators in several cellular processes, which represents an entire new field for drug target elucidation, once this is poorly explored. This perspective review describes the advances on antileishmanial metallodrugs and the elucidation of drug targets based on post-translational modifications, highlighting the limitations on the drug discovery/development process and suggesting standardisations focused on products addressed to who need it most.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35320824 PMCID: PMC8944189 DOI: 10.1590/0074-02760220403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ISSN: 0074-0276 Impact factor: 2.743
Fig. 1:examples of metallodrugs presenting in vivo antileishmanial activity as potential drug candidates to tackle leishmaniasis. CL: cutaneous leishmaniasis; VL: visceral leishmaniasis; IP: intra-peritoneal; Ther: therapeutical. Molecular structures were reproduced from. , , , ,
Fig. 2:antileishmanial drug discovery and development pipeline. Target elucidation is part of fundamental research performed in universities and research centers. Drug target validation can be a result of collaborative work between pharmaceutical industry and academy. This initial step leads to the synthesis of new potential inhibitors that are synthesised and can be optimised after drug screening. Computer-aid strategies are helpful on rational drug design. Drug sensitivity values obtained during phenotypic screening on antileishmanial activity and drug toxicity are used to improve activity and reduce unwanted effects. Antileishmanial in vitro assays should be performed using intracellular amastigote forms. For that, the drug toxicity against the used host cell must be evaluated previously. Murine bone marrow-derived macrophages, murine peritoneal macrophages or human monocyte-derived THP-1 macrophages are commonly used as host-cells. When assaying metal-based drugs, it is important to choose defined or semi-defined culture medium, since reactive metal atom can interact with medium constituents and interfere with drug availability. The selection of resistant parasites by increased step-wise drug pressure can be an indicative of easy drug resistance acquisition. It can be included during in vitro phenotypic screening as an assay of drug-resistance prediction. Before moving forward through in vivo efficacy evaluation, it is strongly recommended to obtain the drug pharmacokinetic profile in a reduced group of golden hamsters. Drug administration preferable route is oral and visceral leishmaniasis model should be the first choice on evaluating systemic antileishmanial effect. If successful, cutaneous leishmaniasis model can be included. Drug combination is encouraged in order to prevent drug resistance emergence, increase efficacy and to reduce toxicity. In vivo efficacy and administration, distribution, metabolism, excretion and toxicity (ADMET) hints can feedback drug design and resynthesis. Predictive ADMET can also be assessed using computational approaches, like pkCSM tool (http://biosig.unimelb.edu.au/pkcsm). The crucial step on antileishmanial drug discovery/ development is to establish partnership with the pharmaceutical industry, especially during scaling up, production and for clinical trials. Consortia with government can afford legal and financial security. The gap between academic research and the industry against neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) will be reduced only after aligning goals and together with the private and public sectors. Parts of Fig. 2 were created with BioRender.com and are licensed under the agreement number: JY23H65VZS.
Fig. 3:impact of CRISPR/Cas9 in the identification of potential drug targets in Leishmania related to post-translational modification (PTMs). The number of Leishmania genes with published attempts at the creation of a null mutant almost tripled after the establishment of CRISPR/Cas9 technology compared to the period where the main method consisted in the homologous recombination of fragments bearing homology regions alone (upper panel). This is more evident for Leishmania genes belonging to PTM regulatory machinery (upper panel, right data), and especially for those involved in the regulation of phosphorylation (PKs), ubiquitination (UB) and acetylation (BDR) (lower panels).