The tetrahydro-β-carboline
scaffold has proven fertile ground
for the discovery of antimalarial agents (e.g., MMV008138 (1) and cipargamin (2)). Similarity searching of a publicly
disclosed collection of antimalarial hits for molecules resembling 1 drew our attention to N2-acyl tetrahydro-β-carboline
GNF-Pf-5009 ((±)-3b). Compound purchase, “analog
by catalog”, and independent synthesis of hits indicated the
benzofuran-2-yl amide portion was required for in vitro efficacy against P. falciparum. Preparation of
pure enantiomers demonstrated the pharmacological superiority of (R)-3b. Synthesis and evaluation of D- and F-ring
substitution variants and benzofuran isosteres indicated a clear structure–activity
relationship. Ultimately (R)-3b was
tested in Plasmodium berghei-infected mice; unfavorable
physicochemical properties may be responsible for the lack of oral
efficacy.
Drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae represents a major threat to public health; without new effective antibiotics, untreatable gonococcal infections loom as a real possibility. In a previous drug-repurposing study, we reported that salicylic acid had good potency against azithromycin-resistant N. gonorrhoeae. We now report that the anti-gonococcal activity in this scaffold is easily lost by inopportune substitution, but that select substituted naphthyl analogs (3b,o,p) have superior activity to salicylic acid itself. Promisingly, these compounds also show very weak growth inhibition of commensal vaginal bacteria.
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