Article
Antimalarial and anti-inflammatory activities of new chloroquine and primaquine hybrids: Targeting the blockade of malaria parasite transmission
Registro en:
BOECHAT, Nubia. Antimalarial and anti-inflammatory activities of new chloroquine and primaquine hybrids: Targeting the blockade of malaria parasite transmission Bioorg Med Chem., v. 28, n. 24, 115832, 2020. doi: 10.1016/j.bmc.2020.115832.
0968-0896
10.1016/j.bmc.2020.115832
Autor
Boechat, Nubia
Carvalho, Rita C C
Ferreira, Maria de Lourdes G
Coutinho, Julia Penna
Sa, Paula M
Seito, Leonardo N
Rosas, Elaine C
Krettli, Antoniana Ursine
Bastos, Monica M
Pinheiro, Luiz C S
Resumen
Malaria is a disease that requires new drugs not only to fight Plasmodium but also to reduce symptoms of infection such as fever and inflammation. A series of 21 hybrid compounds were designed from chloroquine (CQ) and primaquine (PQ) linked to the pharmacophoric group present in phenylacetic anti-inflammatory drugs. These compounds were designed to have dual activity: namely, to be capable of killing Plasmodium and still act on the inflammatory process caused by malaria infection. The compounds were assayed with nine different biological methods. The carbonylated CQ derivative 6 (n = 3; R-1 = Cl) was more potent than CQ in vitro, and 8 (n = 4; R-1 = H) reduced P. berghei parasitemia up to 37% on day 7. The carbonylated PQ derivative 17 (R = Br) was slightly less potent than PQ. The gem-difluoro PQ derivative 20 (R = Cl) exhibited high transmission blockade of the malaria sporogonic cycle in mosquitoes. Compounds 6 and 20 dose-dependently reduced nitric oxide (NO) production and inhibited TNF alpha production by LPS-stimulated J774A.1 macrophages. Our results indicate a viable and interesting approach in planning new chemical entities that act as transmission-blocking drugs for treating malaria caused by P. falciparum and P. vivax and the anti-inflammatory process related to this disease. 2099-12-31