Investigation of indolglyoxamide and indolacetamide analogues of polyamines as antimalarial and antitrypanosomal agents.
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ABSTRACT: Pure compound screening has previously identified the indolglyoxy lamidospermidine ascidian metabolites didemnidine A and B (2 and 3) to be weak growth inhibitors of Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense (IC50 59 and 44 ?M, respectively) and Plasmodium falciparum (K1 dual drug resistant strain) (IC50 41 and 15 ?M, respectively), but lacking in selectivity (L6 rat myoblast, IC50 24 ?M and 25 ?M, respectively). To expand the structure-activity relationship of this compound class towards both parasites, we have prepared and biologically tested a library of analogues that includes indoleglyoxyl and indoleacetic "capping acids", and polyamines including spermine (PA3-4-3) and extended analogues PA3-8-3 and PA3-12-3. 7-Methoxy substituted indoleglyoxylamides were typically found to exhibit the most potent antimalarial activity (IC50 10-92 nM) but with varying degrees of selectivity versus the L6 rat myoblast cell line. A 6-methoxyindolglyoxylamide analogue was the most potent growth inhibitor of T. brucei (IC50 0.18 ?M) identified in the study: it, however, also exhibited poor selectivity (L6 IC50 6.0 ?M). There was no apparent correlation between antimalarial and anti-T. brucei activity in the series. In vivo evaluation of one analogue against Plasmodium berghei was undertaken, demonstrating a modest 20.9% reduction in parasitaemia.
SUBMITTER: Wang J
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4071569 | biostudies-literature | 2014 May
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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