Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malaria
continues to represent a very serious health problem in the tropics. The current methods of clinical treatment are showing deficiencies due to the increased incidence of resistance in the parasite. In the present paper we report the design, synthesis, and evaluation of potential antimalarial agents against a novel target,
protein farnesyltransferase
. We show that the most potent compounds are active against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro at submicromolar concentrations.
...
PMID:Peptidomimetic inhibitors of protein farnesyltransferase show potent antimalarial activity. 1127 14
Comparison of the
malaria
parasite and mammalian protein prenyltransferases and their cellular substrates is important for establishing this enzyme as a target for developing antimalarial agents. Nineteen heptapeptides differing only in their carboxyl-terminal amino acid were tested as alternative substrates of partially purified Plasmodium falciparum
protein farnesyltransferase
. Only NRSCAIM and NRSCAIQ serve as substrates, with NRSCAIM being the best. Peptidomimetics, FTI-276 and GGTI-287, inhibit the transferase with IC(50) values of 1 and 32 nm, respectively. Incubation of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes with [(3)H]farnesol labels 50- and 22-28-kDa proteins, whereas [(3)H]geranylgeraniol labels only 22-28-kDa proteins. The 50-kDa protein is shown to be farnesylated, whereas the 22-28-kDa proteins are geranylgeranylated, irrespective of the labeling prenol. Protein labeling is inhibited more than 50% by either 5 microm FTI-277 or GGTI-298. The same concentration of inhibitors also inhibits parasite growth from the ring stage by 50%, decreases expression of prenylated proteins as measured with prenyl-specific antibody, and inhibits parasite differentiation beyond the trophozoite stage. Furthermore, differentiation specific prenylation of P. falciparum proteins is demonstrated. Protein labeling is detected predominantly during the trophozoite to schizont and schizont to ring transitions. These results demonstrate unique properties of protein prenylation in P. falciparum: a limited specificity of the farnesyltransferase for peptide substrates compared with mammalian enzymes, the ability to use farnesol to label both farnesyl and geranylgeranyl moieties on proteins, differentiation specific protein prenylation, and the ability of peptidomimetic prenyltransferase inhibitors to block parasite differentiation.
...
PMID:Protein farnesyltransferase and protein prenylation in Plasmodium falciparum. 1219 69
New therapeutics to combat
malaria
are desperately needed. Here we show that the enzyme
protein farnesyltransferase
(
PFT
) from the
malaria
parasite Plasmodium falciparum (P. falciparum) is an ideal drug target.
PFT
inhibitors (PFTIs) are well tolerated in man, but are highly cytotoxic to P. falciparum. Because of their anticancer properties, PFTIs comprise a highly developed class of compounds. PFTIs are ideal for the rapid development of antimalarials, allowing "piggy-backing" on previously garnered information. Low nanomolar concentrations of tetrahydroquinoline (THQ)-based PFTIs inhibit P. falciparum
PFT
and are cytotoxic to cultured parasites. Biochemical studies suggest inhibition of parasite
PFT
as the mode of THQ cytotoxicity. Studies with
malaria
-infected mice show that THQ PFTIs dramatically reduce parasitemia and lead to parasite eradication in the majority of animals. These studies validate P. falciparum
PFT
as a target for the development of antimalarials and describe a potent new class of THQ PFTIs with antimalaria activity.
...
PMID:Protein farnesyltransferase inhibitors exhibit potent antimalarial activity. 1591 22
Malaria
has been one of the most significant public health problems for centuries. It affects many tropical and subtropical regions of the world. The increasing resistance of Plasmodium spp. to existing therapies has heightened alarms about
malaria
in the international health community. Nowadays, there is a pressing need for identifying and developing new drug-based antimalarial therapies. In an effort to overcome this problem, the main purpose of this study is to develop simple linear discriminant-based quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models for the classification and prediction of antimalarial activity using some of the TOMOCOMD-CARDD (TOpological MOlecular COMputer Design-Computer Aided "Rational" Drug Design) fingerprints, so as to enable computational screening from virtual combinatorial datasets. In this sense, a database of 1562 organic chemicals having great structural variability, 597 of them antimalarial agents and 965 compounds having other clinical uses, was analyzed and presented as a helpful tool, not only for theoretical chemists but also for other researchers in this area. This series of compounds was processed by a k-means cluster analysis in order to design training and predicting sets. Afterward, two linear classification functions were derived in order to discriminate between antimalarial and nonantimalarial compounds. The models (including nonstochastic and stochastic indices) correctly classify more than 93% of the compound set, in both training and external prediction datasets. They showed high Matthews' correlation coefficients, 0.889 and 0.866 for the training set and 0.855 and 0.857 for the test one. The models' predictivity was also assessed and validated by the random removal of 10% of the compounds to form a new test set, for which predictions were made using the models. The overall means of the correct classification for this process (leave group 10% full-out cross validation) using the equations with nonstochastic and stochastic atom-based quadratic fingerprints were 93.93% and 92.77%, respectively. The quadratic maps-based TOMOCOMD-CARDD approach implemented in this work was successfully compared with four of the most useful models for antimalarials selection reported to date. The developed models were then used in a simulation of a virtual search for Ras
FTase
(
FTase
= farnesyltransferase) inhibitors with antimalarial activity; 70% and 100% of the 10 inhibitors used in this virtual search were correctly classified, showing the ability of the models to identify new lead antimalarials. Finally, these two QSAR models were used in the identification of previously unknown antimalarials. In this sense, three synthetic intermediaries of quinolinic compounds were evaluated as active/inactive ones using the developed models. The synthesis and biological evaluation of these chemicals against two
malaria
strains, using chloroquine as a reference, was performed. An accuracy of 100% with the theoretical predictions was observed. Compound 3 showed antimalarial activity, being the first report of an arylaminomethylenemalonate having such behavior. This result opens a door to a virtual study considering a higher variability of the structural core already evaluated, as well as of other chemicals not included in this study. We conclude that the approach described here seems to be a promising QSAR tool for the molecular discovery of novel classes of antimalarial drugs, which may meet the dual challenges posed by drug-resistant parasites and the rapid progression of
malaria
illnesses.
...
PMID:Ligand-based virtual screening and in silico design of new antimalarial compounds using nonstochastic and stochastic total and atom-type quadratic maps. 1604 4
Protein farnesylation is a form of posttranslational modification that occurs in most, if not all, eukaryotic cells. Inhibitors of
protein farnesyltransferase
(PFTIs) have been developed as anticancer chemotherapeutic agents. Using the knowledge gained from the development of PFTIs for the treatment of cancer, researchers are currently investigating the use of PFTIs for the treatment of eukaryotic pathogens. This "piggy-back" approach not only accelerates the development of a chemotherapeutic agent for protozoan pathogens but is also a means of mitigating the costs associated with de novo drug design. PFTIs have already been shown to be efficacious in the treatment of eukaryotic pathogens in animal models, including both Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of African sleeping sickness, and Plasmodium falciparum, one of the causative agents of
malaria
. Here, current evidence and progress are summarized that support the targeting of
protein farnesyltransferase
for the treatment of parasitic diseases.
...
PMID:Thematic review series: lipid posttranslational modifications. Fighting parasitic disease by blocking protein farnesylation. 1633 10
Third world nations require immediate access to inexpensive therapeutics to counter the high mortality inflicted by
malaria
. Here, we report a new class of antimalarial
protein farnesyltransferase
(
PFT
) inhibitors, designed with specific emphasis on simple molecular architecture, to facilitate easy access to therapies based on this recently validated antimalarial target. This novel series of compounds represents the first Plasmodium falciparum selective
PFT
inhibitors reported (up to 145-fold selectivity), with lead inhibitors displaying excellent in vitro activity (IC(50) < 1 nM) and toxicity to cultured parasites at low concentrations (ED(50) < 100 nM). Initial studies of absorption, metabolism, and oral bioavailability are reported.
...
PMID:Structurally simple, potent, Plasmodium selective farnesyltransferase inhibitors that arrest the growth of malaria parasites. 1697 Mar 97
Malaria
is the most important parasitic disease worldwide, affecting more than 500 million people and causing close to 1 million deaths per annum. This serious fact is mainly attributable to the emergence of drug resistant strains of Plasmodium falciparum. The advances made in
malaria
chemotherapy based on unique aspects of the biochemistry and physiology of the responsible agents for this disease, parasites of Plasmodium genus, are covered in this review. Increasing resistance to conventional antimalarial drugs constitutes the main drawback for the persistence of this disease. In the present article, a comprehensive analysis of selected molecular targets is depicted in terms of their potential utility as chemotherapeutic agents. Our review focuses on different and important molecular targets for drug design that include proteases that hydrolyze hemoglobin,
protein farnesyltransferase
, heme detoxification pathway, polyamine pathways, dihydrofolate reductase, artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs), etc. Therefore, rational approaches to control
malaria
targeting metabolic pathways of
malaria
parasites which are essential for parasites survival are presented.
...
PMID:Current status and progresses made in malaria chemotherapy. 1730 34
Substituted tetrahydroquinolines (THQs) have been previously identified as inhibitors of mammalian
protein farnesyltransferase
(
PFT
). Previously we showed that blocking
PFT
in the
malaria
parasite led to cell death and that THQ-based inhibitors are the most potent among several structural classes of
PFT
inhibitors (PFTIs). We have prepared 266 THQ-based PFTIs and discovered several compounds that inhibit the malarial enzyme in the sub- to low-nanomolar range and that block the growth of the parasite (P. falciparum) in the low-nanomolar range. This body of structure-activity data can be rationalized in most cases by consideration of the X-ray structure of one of the THQs bound to mammalian
PFT
together with a homology structural model of the malarial enzyme. The results of this study provide the basis for selection of antimalarial PFTIs for further evaluation in preclinical drug discovery assays.
...
PMID:Second generation tetrahydroquinoline-based protein farnesyltransferase inhibitors as antimalarials. 1772 1
A new class of 2-oxo-tetrahydro-1,8-naphthyridine-based
protein farnesyltransferase
inhibitors were synthesized and found to inhibit
protein farnesyltransferase
from the
malaria
parasite with potencies in the low nanomolar range. The compounds were much less potent on mammalian protein prenyltransferases. Two of the compounds block the growth of
malaria
in culture with potencies in the sub-micromolar range. Some of the compounds were found to be much more metabolically stable than previously described tetrahydroquinoline-based
protein farnesyltransferase
inhibitors.
...
PMID:2-Oxo-tetrahydro-1,8-naphthyridines as selective inhibitors of malarial protein farnesyltransferase and as anti-malarials. 1807 62
We report a series of novel inhibitors of
protein farnesyltransferase
based on the 2-oxotetrahydroquinoline scaffold. We developed an efficient synthesis of these compounds. These compounds show selective inhibtion of the
malaria
versus human farnesyltransferase and inhibit the growth of the
malaria
parasite in the low nanomolar range. Some of the compounds are at least an order of magnitude more stable to metabolic degradation than the corresponding tetrahydroquinolines.
...
PMID:2-Oxotetrahydroquinoline-based antimalarials with high potency and metabolic stability. 1819 25
1
2
Next >>