Publication | Open Access
Pharmacological Validation of Trypanosoma brucei Phosphodiesterases as Novel Drug Targets
93
Citations
21
References
2012
Year
Medicinal ChemistryDrug TargetTrypanosomal PdesAfrican TrypanosomiasisMedicineAntiparasitic AgentMalariaImmunologyParasitic ProtozoaCpd AParasite GenomicsTrypanosoma Brucei PhosphodiesterasesParasite EnzymesImmunotherapyPharmacologyParasitologyDrug Discovery
The development of drugs for neglected infectious diseases often uses parasite-specific enzymes as targets. We here demonstrate that parasite enzymes with highly conserved human homologs may represent a promising reservoir of new potential drug targets. The cyclic nucleotide-specific phosphodiesterases (PDEs) of Trypanosoma brucei, causative agent of the fatal human sleeping sickness, are essential for the parasite. The highly conserved human homologs are well-established drug targets. We here describe what is to our knowledge the first pharmacological validation of trypanosomal PDEs as drug targets. High-throughput screening of a proprietary compound library identified a number of potent hits. One compound, the tetrahydrophthalazinone compound A (Cpd A), was further characterized. It causes a dramatic increase of intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). Short-term cell viability is not affected, but cell proliferation is inhibited immediately, and cell death occurs within 3 days. Cpd A prevents cytokinesis, resulting in multinucleated, multiflagellated cells that eventually lyse. These observations pharmacologically validate the highly conserved trypanosomal PDEs as potential drug targets.
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