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Targeting the Trypanothione Reductase of Tissue-Residing Leishmania in Hosts' Reticuloendothelial System: A Flexible Water-Soluble Ferrocenylquinoline-Based Preclinical Drug Candidate.

Debarati MukherjeeMd YousufSomaditya DeySondipon ChakrabortyAnkur ChaudhuriVinay KumarBiswajyoti SarkarSupriya NathAabid HussainAritri DuttaTanushree MishraBiswajit Gopal RoySushma SinghSibani ChakrabortySusanta AdhikariChiranjib Pal
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2020)
Since inception, the magic bullets developed against leishmaniasis traveled a certain path and then dropped down due to either toxicity or the emergence of resistance. The route of administration is also an important concern. We developed a series of water-soluble ferrocenylquinoline derivatives, targeting Leishmania donovani, among which CQFC1 showed the highest efficacy even in comparison to other drugs, in use or used, both in oral and intramuscular routes. It did not induce any toxicity to splenocytes and on hematopoiesis, induced protective cytokines, and did not hamper the drug-metabolizing enzymes in hosts. It acts through the reduction and the inhibition of parasites' survival enzyme trypanothione reductase of replicating amastigotes in hosts' reticuloendothelial tissues. Unlike conventional drugs, this molecule did not induce the resistance-conferring genes in laboratory-maintained resistant L. donovani lines. Experimentally, this easily bioavailable preclinical drug candidate overcame all of the limitations causing the discontinuation of the other conventional antileishmanial drugs.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • drug induced
  • oxidative stress
  • gene expression
  • adverse drug
  • cancer therapy
  • cell therapy
  • diabetic rats
  • high glucose
  • drug delivery
  • bone marrow
  • endothelial cells
  • oxide nanoparticles