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"Seasoning" antimalarial drugs' action: chloroquine bile salts as novel triple-stage antiplasmodial hits.

Ana Teresa SilvaIsabel OliveiraDenise Maria F A DuarteDiana MoitaMiguel PrudncioFátima NogueiraRicardo FerrazEduardo Figueira MarquesPaula A C Gomes
Published in: RSC medicinal chemistry (2024)
Malaria is one of the "big three" global infectious diseases, having caused above two hundred million cases and over half a million deaths in 2020. The continuous demand for new treatment options prioritizes the cost-effective development of new chemical entities with multi-stage antiplasmodial activity, for higher efficacy and lower propensity to elicit drug-resistant parasite strains. Following up on our long-term research towards the rescue of classical antimalarial aminoquinolines like chloroquine and primaquine, we have developed new organic salts by acid-base pairing of those drugs with natural bile acids. These antimalarial drug-derived bile salts were screened in vitro against the hepatic, blood and gametocyte stages of Plasmodium parasites, unveiling chloroquine bile salts as unprecedented triple-stage antiplasmodial hits. These findings pave a new pathway for drug rescuing, even beyond anti-malarial and other anti-infective drugs.
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