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1.
Molecules ; 29(10)2024 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38792079

ABSTRACT

Infectious diseases caused by trypanosomatids, including African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness), Chagas disease, and different forms of leishmaniasis, are Neglected Tropical Diseases affecting millions of people worldwide, mainly in vulnerable territories of tropical and subtropical areas. In general, current treatments against these diseases are old-fashioned, showing adverse effects and loss of efficacy due to misuse or overuse, thus leading to the emergence of resistance. For these reasons, searching for new antitrypanosomatid drugs has become an urgent necessity, and different metabolic pathways have been studied as potential drug targets against these parasites. Considering that trypanosomatids possess a unique redox pathway based on the trypanothione molecule absent in the mammalian host, the key enzymes involved in trypanothione metabolism, trypanothione reductase and trypanothione synthetase, have been studied in detail as druggable targets. In this review, we summarize some of the recent findings on the molecules inhibiting these two essential enzymes for Trypanosoma and Leishmania viability.


Subject(s)
Amide Synthases , Glutathione , NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases , Trypanosoma , NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases/metabolism , NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases/antagonists & inhibitors , Humans , Amide Synthases/metabolism , Amide Synthases/antagonists & inhibitors , Trypanosoma/drug effects , Trypanosoma/metabolism , Glutathione/metabolism , Glutathione/analogs & derivatives , Animals , Spermidine/analogs & derivatives , Spermidine/metabolism , Leishmania/drug effects , Leishmania/metabolism , Trypanocidal Agents/pharmacology , Trypanocidal Agents/therapeutic use , Leishmaniasis/drug therapy , Leishmaniasis/metabolism , Leishmaniasis/parasitology , Trypanosomatina/metabolism , Trypanosomatina/drug effects , Protozoan Proteins/metabolism , Protozoan Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Chagas Disease/drug therapy , Chagas Disease/parasitology , Chagas Disease/metabolism
2.
Trop Med Infect Dis ; 9(2)2024 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393119

ABSTRACT

One of the major drawbacks of current treatments for neglected tropical diseases is the low safety of the drugs used and the emergence of resistance. Leishmaniasis is a group of neglected diseases caused by protozoa of the trypanosomatidae family that lacks preventive vaccines and whose pharmacological treatments are scarce and unsafe. Combination therapy is a strategy that could solve the above-mentioned problems, due to the participation of several mechanisms of action and the reduction in the amount of drug necessary to obtain the therapeutic effect. In addition, this approach also increases the odds of finding an effective drug following the repurposing strategy. From the previous screening of two collections of repositioning drugs, we found that pyrvinium pamoate had a potent leishmanicidal effect. For this reason, we decided to combine it separately with two clinically used leishmanicidal drugs, miltefosine and paromomycin. These combinations were tested in axenic amastigotes of Leishmania infantum obtained from bone marrow cells and in intramacrophagic amastigotes obtained from primary cultures of splenic cells, both cell types coming from experimentally infected mice. Some of the combinations showed synergistic behavior, especially in the case of the combination of pyrvinium pamoate with paromomycin, and exhibited low cytotoxicity and good tolerability on intestinal murine organoids, which reveal the potential of these combinations for the treatment of leishmaniasis.

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