Advertisement

If you have an ACS member number, please enter it here so we can link this account to your membership. (optional)

ACS values your privacy. By submitting your information, you are gaining access to C&EN and subscribing to our weekly newsletter. We use the information you provide to make your reading experience better, and we will never sell your data to third party members.

ENJOY UNLIMITED ACCES TO C&EN

Pharmaceuticals

Single agent targets three parasitic infections

Discovery could lead to improved drugs for Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, and sleeping sickness

by Stu Borman
August 8, 2016

Parasitic protists known as kinetoplastids infect millions of people annually, predominantly in poor communities in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. And the diseases caused by these parasites, African sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, and Chagas disease, kill tens of thousands every year.

Doctors urgently need new therapies for these infections because available medicines suffer from multiple shortcomings. For example, the best medication for sleeping sickness has significant side effects and must be administered by trained personnel in hospitals, which are scarce in poor countries.

Frantisek Supek of the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, in San Diego, and coworkers have now identified a common target in kinetoplastids that can be hit with a single molecule (Nature 2016, DOI: 10.1038/nature19339).

The compound, called GNF6702, can clear the sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, and Chagas parasites from mice with efficacy comparable to existing anti-kinetoplastid medications. And the molecule does so through a new mechanism of action—inhibiting the parasites’ cellular protein-disposal system, called the proteasome. GNF6702 hits the parasitic proteasome without inhibiting the human one, which could help minimize its side effects.

The proteasome target “is novel in a field with a dearth of drug targets and new therapies,” comments Graeme Bilbe, R&D director at the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, in Geneva, Switzerland. “The work is a startling breakthrough but still at an early stage.”

Although testing the safety of GNF6702 is needed before it can reach clinical trials, Bilbe notes some promising features of the compound, including that it can be given orally and that it matches or exceeds the efficacy of drugs currently used to treat the three conditions.

To find the compound, Supek and coworkers carried out high-throughput screening of three million compounds for agents effective against all three infections. Then, through medicinal chemistry, the team enhanced those molecules’ bioavailability, potency, and selectivity, while reducing their toxicity, eventually yielding GNF6702. The compound prevents the parasites’ growth and proliferation by inhibiting a crucial enzyme in their proteasomes.

Treating the three diseases with one agent could have advantages, such as convenience in resource-limited settings. But the researchers acknowledge that analogs of GNF6702 “might be needed for treatment of different kinetoplastid infections.

“Nevertheless,” the researchers say, “there are only scarce resources for drug development in these diseases, and identification of a common target and chemical scaffold with potential across multiple indications provides new hope for improved treatment options for some of the world’s poorest people.”

Novartis is currently analyzing the toxicity of GNF6702-related compounds in animals.

Advertisement

Article:

This article has been sent to the following recipient:

0 /1 FREE ARTICLES LEFT THIS MONTH Remaining
Chemistry matters. Join us to get the news you need.