Generic placeholder image

Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

A Physico-Biochemical Study on Potential Redox-Cyclers as Antimalarial and Antischistosomal Drugs

Author(s): Laure Johann, Don Antoine Lanfranchi, Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet and Mourad Elhabiri

Volume 18, Issue 24, 2012

Page: [3539 - 3566] Pages: 28

DOI: 10.2174/138161212801327284

Price: $65

Abstract

The role of redox enzymes in establishing a microenvironment for parasite development is well characterized. Mimicking human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and glutathione reductase (GR) deficiencies by redox-cycling compounds thus represents a challenge to the design of new preclinical antiparasitic drug candidates. Schistosomes and malarial parasites feed on hemoglobin. Heme, the toxic prosthetic group of the protein, is not digested and represents a challenge to the redox metabolism of the parasites. Here, we report on old and new redox-cycling compounds – whose antiparasitic activities are related to their interference with (met)hemoglobin degradation and hematin crystallization. Three key-assays allowed probing and differentiating the mechanisms of drug actions. Inhibition of β-hematin was first compared to the heme binding as a possible mode of action. All tested ligands interact with the hematin π-π dimer with KD similar to those measured for the major antiparasitic drugs. No correlation between a high affinity for hematin and the capacity to prevent β-hematin formation was however deduced. Inhibition of β-hematin formation is consequently not the result of a single process but results from redox processes following electron transfers from the drugs to iron(III)-containing targets. The third experiment highlighted that several redox-active compounds (in their reduced forms) are able to efficiently reduce methemoglobin to hemoglobin in a GR/NADPH-coupled assay. A correlation between methemoglobin reduction and inhibition of β-hematin was shown, demonstrating that both processes are closely related. The ability of our redox-cyclers to trigger methemoglobin reduction therefore constitutes a critical step to understand the mechanism of action of our drug candidates.

Keywords: hematin, β-hematin, antimalarial, antischistosomal, naphthoquinone, xanthone, NADPH-dependent disulfide reductase, redoxcycler, glutathione reductase (GR), hemoglobin


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy