Cyclization-blocked proguanil as a strategy to improve the antimalarial activity of atovaquone

环化阻断氯胍作为提高阿托伐醌抗疟活性的策略

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作者:Tina S Skinner-Adams #, Gillian M Fisher, Andrew G Riches, Oliver E Hutt, Karen E Jarvis, Tony Wilson, Mark von Itzstein, Pradeep Chopra, Yevgeniya Antonova-Koch, Stephan Meister, Elizabeth A Winzeler, Mary Clarke, David A Fidock, Jeremy N Burrows, John H Ryan #, Katherine T Andrews #

Abstract

Atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone®) is used for malaria prophylaxis and treatment. While the cytochrome bc1-inhibitor atovaquone has potent activity, proguanil's action is attributed to its cyclization-metabolite, cycloguanil. Evidence suggests that proguanil has limited intrinsic activity, associated with mitochondrial-function. Here we demonstrate that proguanil, and cyclization-blocked analogue tBuPG, have potent, but slow-acting, in vitro anti-plasmodial activity. Activity is folate-metabolism and isoprenoid biosynthesis-independent. In yeast dihydroorotate dehydrogenase-expressing parasites, proguanil and tBuPG slow-action remains, while bc1-inhibitor activity switches from comparatively fast to slow-acting. Like proguanil, tBuPG has activity against P. berghei liver-stage parasites. Both analogues act synergistically with bc1-inhibitors against blood-stages in vitro, however cycloguanil antagonizes activity. Together, these data suggest that proguanil is a potent slow-acting anti-plasmodial agent, that bc1 is essential to parasite survival independent of dihydroorotate dehydrogenase-activity, that Malarone® is a triple-drug combination that includes antagonistic partners and that a cyclization-blocked proguanil may be a superior combination partner for bc1-inhibitors in vivo.

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