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Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery

Schistosomiasis is one of the most important neglected tropical diseases. Until an effective vaccine is registered for use, the cornerstone of schistosomiasis control remains chemotherapy with praziquantel. The sustainability of this strategy is at substantial risk due to the possibility of praziqua...

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Autores principales: Padalino, Gilda, Coghlan, Avril, Pagliuca, Giampaolo, Forde-Thomas, Josephine E., Berriman, Matthew, Hoffmann, Karl F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10220823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37242601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051359
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author Padalino, Gilda
Coghlan, Avril
Pagliuca, Giampaolo
Forde-Thomas, Josephine E.
Berriman, Matthew
Hoffmann, Karl F.
author_facet Padalino, Gilda
Coghlan, Avril
Pagliuca, Giampaolo
Forde-Thomas, Josephine E.
Berriman, Matthew
Hoffmann, Karl F.
author_sort Padalino, Gilda
collection PubMed
description Schistosomiasis is one of the most important neglected tropical diseases. Until an effective vaccine is registered for use, the cornerstone of schistosomiasis control remains chemotherapy with praziquantel. The sustainability of this strategy is at substantial risk due to the possibility of praziquantel insensitive/resistant schistosomes developing. Considerable time and effort could be saved in the schistosome drug discovery pipeline if available functional genomics, bioinformatics, cheminformatics and phenotypic resources are systematically leveraged. Our approach, described here, outlines how schistosome-specific resources/methodologies, coupled to the open-access drug discovery database ChEMBL, can be cooperatively used to accelerate early-stage, schistosome drug discovery efforts. Our process identified seven compounds (fimepinostat, trichostatin A, NVP-BEP800, luminespib, epoxomicin, CGP60474 and staurosporine) with ex vivo anti-schistosomula potencies in the sub-micromolar range. Three of those compounds (epoxomicin, CGP60474 and staurosporine) also demonstrated potent and fast-acting ex vivo effects on adult schistosomes and completely inhibited egg production. ChEMBL toxicity data were also leveraged to provide further support for progressing CGP60474 (as well as luminespib and TAE684) as a novel anti-schistosomal compound. As very few compounds are currently at the advanced stages of the anti-schistosomal pipeline, our approaches highlight a strategy by which new chemical matter can be identified and quickly progressed through preclinical development.
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spelling pubmed-102208232023-05-28 Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery Padalino, Gilda Coghlan, Avril Pagliuca, Giampaolo Forde-Thomas, Josephine E. Berriman, Matthew Hoffmann, Karl F. Pharmaceutics Article Schistosomiasis is one of the most important neglected tropical diseases. Until an effective vaccine is registered for use, the cornerstone of schistosomiasis control remains chemotherapy with praziquantel. The sustainability of this strategy is at substantial risk due to the possibility of praziquantel insensitive/resistant schistosomes developing. Considerable time and effort could be saved in the schistosome drug discovery pipeline if available functional genomics, bioinformatics, cheminformatics and phenotypic resources are systematically leveraged. Our approach, described here, outlines how schistosome-specific resources/methodologies, coupled to the open-access drug discovery database ChEMBL, can be cooperatively used to accelerate early-stage, schistosome drug discovery efforts. Our process identified seven compounds (fimepinostat, trichostatin A, NVP-BEP800, luminespib, epoxomicin, CGP60474 and staurosporine) with ex vivo anti-schistosomula potencies in the sub-micromolar range. Three of those compounds (epoxomicin, CGP60474 and staurosporine) also demonstrated potent and fast-acting ex vivo effects on adult schistosomes and completely inhibited egg production. ChEMBL toxicity data were also leveraged to provide further support for progressing CGP60474 (as well as luminespib and TAE684) as a novel anti-schistosomal compound. As very few compounds are currently at the advanced stages of the anti-schistosomal pipeline, our approaches highlight a strategy by which new chemical matter can be identified and quickly progressed through preclinical development. MDPI 2023-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10220823/ /pubmed/37242601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051359 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Padalino, Gilda
Coghlan, Avril
Pagliuca, Giampaolo
Forde-Thomas, Josephine E.
Berriman, Matthew
Hoffmann, Karl F.
Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title_full Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title_fullStr Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title_full_unstemmed Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title_short Using ChEMBL to Complement Schistosome Drug Discovery
title_sort using chembl to complement schistosome drug discovery
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10220823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37242601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15051359
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