Amodiaquine (AQ) (2) is a 4-aminoquinoline antimalarial that can cause adverse side effects including agranulocytosis and liver damage. The observed drug toxicity is believed to involve the formation of an electrophilic metabolite, amodiaquine quinoneimine (AQQI), which can bind to cellular macromolecules and initiate hypersensitivity reactions. We proposed that interchange of the 3' hydroxyl and the 4' Mannich side-chain function of amodiaquine would provide a new series of analogues that cannot form toxic quinoneimine metabolites via cytochrome P450-mediated metabolism. By a simple two-step procedure, 10 isomeric amodiaquine analogues were prepared and subsequently examined against the chloroquine resistant K1 and sensitive HB3 strains of Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. Several analogues displayed potent antimalarial activity against both strains. On the basis of the results of in vitro testing, isoquine (ISQ1 (3a)) (IC(50) = 6.01 nM +/- 8.0 versus K1 strain), the direct isomer of amodiaquine, was selected for in vivo antimalarial assessment. The potent in vitro antimalarial activity of isoquine was translated into excellent oral in vivo ED(50) activity of 1.6 and 3.7 mg/kg against the P. yoelii NS strain compared to 7.9 and 7.4 mg/kg for amodiaquine. Subsequent metabolism studies in the rat model demonstrated that isoquine does not undergo in vivo bioactivation, as evidenced by the complete lack of glutathione metabolites in bile. In sharp contrast to amodiaquine, isoquine (and Phase I metabolites) undergoes clearance by Phase II glucuronidation. On the basis of these promising initial studies, isoquine (ISQ1 (3a)) represents a new second generation lead worthy of further investigation as a cost-effective and potentially safer alternative to amodiaquine.
Tebuquine (5) is a 4-aminoquinoline that is significantly more active than amodiaquine (2) and chloroquine (1) both in vitro and in vivo. We have developed a novel more efficient synthetic route to tebuquine analogues which involves the use of a palladium-catalyzed Suzuki reaction to introduce the 4-chlorophenyl moiety into the 4-hydroxyaniline side chain. Using similar methodology, novel synthetic routes to fluorinated (7a, b) and a dehydroxylated (7c) analogue of tebuquine have also been developed. The novel analogues were subjected to testing against the chloroquine sensitive HB3 strain and the chloroquine resistant K1 strain of Plasmodium falciparum. Tebuquine was the most active compound tested against both strains of Plasmodia. Replacement of the 4-hydroxy function with either fluorine or hydrogen led to a decrease in antimalarial activity. Molecular modeling of the tebuquine analogues alongside amodiaquine and chloroquine reveals that the inter-nitrogen separation in this class of drugs ranges between 9.36 and 9.86 A in their isolated diprotonated form and between 7.52 and 10.21 A in the heme-drug complex. Further modeling studies on the interaction of 4-aminoquinolines with the proposed cellular receptor heme revealed favorable interaction energies for chloroquine, amodiaquine, and tebuquine analogues. Tebuquine, the most potent antimalarial in the series, had the most favorable interaction energy calculated in both the in vacuo and solvent-based simulation studies. Although fluorotebuquine (7a) had a similar interaction energy to tebuquine, this compound had significantly reduced potency when compared with (5). This disparity is possibly the result of the reduced cellular accumulation (CAR) of fluorotebuquine when compared with tebuquine within the parasite. Measurement of the cellular accumulation of the tebuquine analogues and seven related 4-aminoquinolines shows a significant relationship (r = 0.98) between the CAR of 4-aminoquinoline drugs and the reciprocal of drugs IC50.
Amodiaquine (AQ) (2) is a 4-aminoquinoline antimalarial which causes adverse side effects such as agranulocytosis and liver damage. The observed drug toxicity is believed to be related to the formation of an electrophilic metabolite, amodiaquine quinone imine (AQQI), which can bind to cellular macro-molecules and initiate hypersensitivity reactions. 5'-Fluoroamodiaquine (5'-FAQ, 3), 5',6'-difluoroamodiaquine (5',6'-DIFAQ,4), 2',6'-difluoroamodiaquine (2',6'-DIFAQ,5), 2',5',6'-trifluoroamodiaquine (2',5',6'-TRIFAQ, 6) and 4'-dehydroxy-4'-fluoroamodiaquine (4'-deOH-4'-FAQ,7) have been synthesized to assess the effect of fluorine substitution on the oxidation potential, metabolism, and in vitro antimalarial activity of amodiaquine. The oxidation potentials were measured by cyclic voltammetry, and it was observed that substitution at the 2',6'- and the 4'-positions (2',6'-DIFAQ and 4'-deOH-4'-FAQ) produced analogues with significantly higher oxidation potentials than the parent drug. Fluorine substitution at the 2',6'-positions and the 4'-position also produced analogues that were more resistant to bioactivation. Thus 2',6'-DIFAQ and 4'-deOH-4'-FAQ produced thioether conjugates corresponding to 2.17% (SD: +/- 0.27%) and 0% of the dose compared with 11.87% (SD: +/- 1.31%) of the dose for amodiaquine. In general the fluorinated analogues had similar in vitro antimalarial activity to amodiaquine against the chloroquine resistant K1 strain of Plasmodium falciparum and the chloroquine sensitive T9-96 strain of P. falciparum with the notable exception of 2',5',6'-TRIFAQ (6). The data presented indicate that fluorine substitution at the 2',6'-positions and replacement of the 4'-hydroxyl of amodiaquine with fluorine produces analogues (5 and 7) that maintain antimalarial efficacy in vitro and are more resistant to oxidation and hence less likely to form toxic quinone imine metabolites in vivo.
The potent antimalarial activity of chloroquine against chloroquine-sensitive strains can be attributed, in part, to its high accumulation in the acidic environment of the heme-rich parasite food vacuole. A key component of this intraparasitic chloroquine accumulation mechanism is a weak base "ion-trapping" effect whereupon the basic drug is concentrated in the acidic food vacuole in its membrane-impermeable diprotonated form. By the incorporation of amino functionality into target artemisinin analogues, we hoped to prepare a new series of analogues that, by virtue of increased accumulation into the ferrous-rich vacuole, would display enhanced antimalarial potency. The initial part of the project focused on the preparation of piperazine-linked analogues (series 1 (7-16)). Antimalarial evaluation of these derivatives demonstrated potent activity versus both chloroquine-sensitive and chloroquine-resistant parasites. On the basis of these observations, we then set about preparing a series of C-10 carba-linked amino derivatives. Optimization of the key synthetic step using a newly developed coupling protocol provided a key intermediate, allyldeoxoartemisinin (17) in 90% yield. Further elaboration, in three steps, provided nine target C-10 carba analogues (series 2 (21-29)) in good overall yields. Antimalarial assessment demonstrated that these compounds were 4-fold more potent than artemisinin and about twice as active as artemether in vitro versus chloroquine-resistant parasites. On the basis of the products obtained from biomimetic Fe(II) degradation of the C-10 carba analogue (23), we propose that these analogues may have a mode of action subtly different from that of the parent drug artemisinin (series 1 (7-16)) and other C-10 ether derivatives such as artemether. Preliminary in vivo testing by the WHO demonstrated that four of these compounds are active orally at doses of less than 10 mg/kg. Since these analogues are available as water-soluble salts and cannot form dihydroartemisinin by P450-catalyzed oxidation, they represent useful leads that might prove to be superior to the currently used derivatives, artemether and artesunate.
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