This study shows an association between the pfcrt T76 mutation in P. falciparum and the development of chloroquine resistance during the treatment of malaria. This mutation can be used as a marker in surveillance for chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria.
Recent reports of increased tolerance to artemisinin derivatives-the last widely effective class of antimalarials -bolster the medical need for new treatments. The spirotetrahydro-β-carbolines, or spiroindolones, are a new class of fast-acting and potent schizonticidal drugs displaying low nanomolar potency against Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax clinical isolates. Spiroindolones rapidly diminish protein synthesis in P. falciparum, an effect that is ablated in parasites bearing non-synonymous mutations in the gene encoding the P-type cation-transporter ATPase4 (PfATP4). The optimized spiroindolone NITD609 shows an acceptable safety profile and pharmacokinetic properties compatible with once-daily oral dosing; and demonstrates singledose efficacy in a rodent malaria model. Collectively, these data demonstrate that NITD609 possesses a pharmacological profile suitable for a new drug candidate for the treatment of malaria.Globally, 3.3 billion people are exposed to malaria, a devastating disease that causes over 800,000 deaths each year and kills more under five-year-olds than any other infectious agent (1). Fifty years ago, malaria had been eliminated from many areas of the world through effective antimalarial drug treatments, vector control interventions and disease prevention # Corresponding authors (Winzeler@scripps.edu and Thierry.diagana@novartis.com). * These authors equally contributed to this work One-sentence summary We describe the pharmacological profile of a new antimalarial drug candidate-the spiroindolone NITD609-which through a novel mechanism of action rapidly clears a Plasmodium infection upon administration of a single oral dose in a malaria mouse model. NIH Public Access Author ManuscriptScience. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 September 3. (2). However, the global spread of drug resistance resulted, by the 1980s, in a substantial increase in disease incidence and mortality. Today, some encouraging epidemiological data suggest that the introduction of new drugs (notably the artemisinin-based combination therapies or ACTs) may have reversed that trend (3). Derivatives of the endoperoxide artemisinin constitute the only antimalarial drugs that remain effective in all malariaendemic regions, but recent reports suggest that decades of continuous use as monotherapies might have fostered the emergence of resistance (4-6). This realization has triggered a concerted search for new drugs that could be deployed if artemisinin resistance were to spread.Many of the therapies currently in development utilize known antimalarial pharmacophores (e.g. aminoquinolines and/or peroxides) chemically modified to overcome the liabilities of their predecessors (7). While these compounds may prove to be important in the treatment of malaria, it would be preferable to discover novel chemotypes with a distinct mechanism of action (8). However, despite significant advances in our understanding of Plasmodium genome biology, the identification and validation of new drug targets has proven challengi...
SummaryThe determinant of verapamil-reversible chloroquine resistance (CQR) in a Plasmodium falciparum genetic cross maps to a 36 kb segment of chromosome 7. This segment harbors a 13-exon gene, pfcrt, having point mutations that associate completely with CQR in parasite lines from Asia, Africa, and South America. These data, transfection results, and selection of a CQR line harboring a novel K76I mutation point to a central role for the PfCRT protein in CQR. This transmembrane protein localizes to the parasite digestive vacuole (DV), the site of CQ action, where increased compartment acidification associates with PfCRT point mutations. Mutations in PfCRT may result in altered chloroquine flux or reduced drug binding to hematin through an effect on DV pH.
The emergence of artemisinin resistance in Southeast Asia imperils efforts to reduce the global malaria burden. We genetically modified the Plasmodium falciparum K13 locus using zinc-finger nucleases and measured ring-stage survival rates after drug exposure in vitro; these rates correlate with parasite clearance half-lives in artemisinin-treated patients. With isolates from Cambodia, where resistance first emerged, survival rates decreased from 13 to 49% to 0.3 to 2.4% after the removal of K13 mutations. Conversely, survival rates in wild-type parasites increased from ≤0.6% to 2 to 29% after the insertion of K13 mutations. These mutations conferred elevated resistance to recent Cambodian isolates compared with that of reference lines, suggesting a contemporary contribution of additional genetic factors. Our data provide a conclusive rationale for worldwide K13-propeller sequencing to identify and eliminate artemisinin-resistant parasites.
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