Malaria is an enormous threat to public health, due to the emergence of Plasmodium fal-ciparum resistance to widely-used antimalarials, such as chloroquine (CQ). Current antimalarial drugs are aromatic heterocyclic derivatives, most often containing a basic component with an added alkyl chain in their chemical structure. While these drugs are effective, they have many side effects. This paper presents the synthesis and preliminary physicochemical characterisation of novel bioinspired imidazolidinedione derivatives, where the imidazolidinedione core was linked via the alkylene chain and the basic piperazine component to the bicyclic system. These compounds were tested against the asexual stages of two strains of P. falciparum—the chloro-quine-sensitive (D10) and chloroquine-resistant (W2) strains. In parallel, in vitro cytotoxicity was investigated on a human keratinocyte cell line, as well as their hemolytic activity. The results demonstrated that the antiplasmodial effects were stronger against the W2 strain (IC50 between 2424.15–5648.07 ng/mL (4.98–11.95 µM)), compared to the D10 strain (6202.00–9659.70 ng/mL (12.75–19.85 µM)). These molecules were also non-hemolytic to human erythrocytes at a concen-tration active towards the parasite, but with low toxicity to mammalian cell line. The synthetized derivatives, possessing enhanced antimalarial activity against the CQ-resistant strain of P. falcipa-rum, appear to be interesting antimalarial drug candidates.

Synthesis and antiplasmodial activity of novel bioinspired imidazolidinedione derivatives / A. Jaromin, A. Czopek, S. Parapini, N. Basilico, E. Misiak, J. Gubernator, A. Zagorska. - In: BIOMOLECULES. - ISSN 2218-273X. - 11:1(2020 Dec), pp. 33.1-33.13. [10.3390/biom11010033]

Synthesis and antiplasmodial activity of novel bioinspired imidazolidinedione derivatives

S. Parapini;N. Basilico;
2020

Abstract

Malaria is an enormous threat to public health, due to the emergence of Plasmodium fal-ciparum resistance to widely-used antimalarials, such as chloroquine (CQ). Current antimalarial drugs are aromatic heterocyclic derivatives, most often containing a basic component with an added alkyl chain in their chemical structure. While these drugs are effective, they have many side effects. This paper presents the synthesis and preliminary physicochemical characterisation of novel bioinspired imidazolidinedione derivatives, where the imidazolidinedione core was linked via the alkylene chain and the basic piperazine component to the bicyclic system. These compounds were tested against the asexual stages of two strains of P. falciparum—the chloro-quine-sensitive (D10) and chloroquine-resistant (W2) strains. In parallel, in vitro cytotoxicity was investigated on a human keratinocyte cell line, as well as their hemolytic activity. The results demonstrated that the antiplasmodial effects were stronger against the W2 strain (IC50 between 2424.15–5648.07 ng/mL (4.98–11.95 µM)), compared to the D10 strain (6202.00–9659.70 ng/mL (12.75–19.85 µM)). These molecules were also non-hemolytic to human erythrocytes at a concen-tration active towards the parasite, but with low toxicity to mammalian cell line. The synthetized derivatives, possessing enhanced antimalarial activity against the CQ-resistant strain of P. falcipa-rum, appear to be interesting antimalarial drug candidates.
Anti-malarial; Antiparasitic agents; Cytotoxicity; Drug resistance; Hemolysis; Imidazolidine-2,4-dione derivatives; Plasmodium falciparum
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
Settore MED/46 - Scienze Tecniche di Medicina di Laboratorio
dic-2020
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/952695
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