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The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids

BACKGROUND: The 8-amino and 9-hydroxy substituents of antimalarial cinchona alkaloids have the erythro orientation while their inactive 9-epimers are threo. From the X-ray structures a 90° difference in torsion angle between the N1-H1 and C9-O12 bonds in the two series is believed to be important. I...

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Autores principales: Warhurst, David C, Craig, John C, Adagu, Ipemida S, Meyer, David J, Lee, Sylvia Y
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC201021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14505493
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-2-26
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author Warhurst, David C
Craig, John C
Adagu, Ipemida S
Meyer, David J
Lee, Sylvia Y
author_facet Warhurst, David C
Craig, John C
Adagu, Ipemida S
Meyer, David J
Lee, Sylvia Y
author_sort Warhurst, David C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The 8-amino and 9-hydroxy substituents of antimalarial cinchona alkaloids have the erythro orientation while their inactive 9-epimers are threo. From the X-ray structures a 90° difference in torsion angle between the N1-H1 and C9-O12 bonds in the two series is believed to be important. In order to kill the malaria parasite, alkaloids must cross the erythrocyte and parasite membranes to accumulate in the acid digestive vacuole where they prevent detoxication of haematin produced during haemoglobin breakdown. METHODS: Ionization constants, octanol/water distribution and haematin interaction are examined for eight alkaloids to explain the influence of small structural differences on activity. RESULTS: Erythro isomers have a high distribution ratio of 55:1 from plasma to the erythrocyte membrane, while for the more basic threo epimers this is only 4.5:1. This gives an increased transfer rate of the erythro drugs into the erythrocyte and thence into the parasite vacuole where their favourable conformation allows interaction with haematin, inhibiting its dimerization strongly (90 ± 7%) and thereby killing the parasite. The threo compounds not only enter more slowly but are then severely restricted from binding to haematin by the gauche alignment of their N1-H1 and C9-O12 bonds. Confirmatory molecular models allowed measurement of angles and bond lengths and computation of the electronic spectrum of a quinine-haematin complex. CONCLUSION: Differences in the antiplasmodial activity of the erythro and threo cinchona alkaloids may therefore be attributed to the cumulative effects of lipid/aqueous distribution ratio and drug-haematin interaction. Possible insights into the mechanism of chloroquine-resistance are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-2010212003-09-30 The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids Warhurst, David C Craig, John C Adagu, Ipemida S Meyer, David J Lee, Sylvia Y Malar J Research BACKGROUND: The 8-amino and 9-hydroxy substituents of antimalarial cinchona alkaloids have the erythro orientation while their inactive 9-epimers are threo. From the X-ray structures a 90° difference in torsion angle between the N1-H1 and C9-O12 bonds in the two series is believed to be important. In order to kill the malaria parasite, alkaloids must cross the erythrocyte and parasite membranes to accumulate in the acid digestive vacuole where they prevent detoxication of haematin produced during haemoglobin breakdown. METHODS: Ionization constants, octanol/water distribution and haematin interaction are examined for eight alkaloids to explain the influence of small structural differences on activity. RESULTS: Erythro isomers have a high distribution ratio of 55:1 from plasma to the erythrocyte membrane, while for the more basic threo epimers this is only 4.5:1. This gives an increased transfer rate of the erythro drugs into the erythrocyte and thence into the parasite vacuole where their favourable conformation allows interaction with haematin, inhibiting its dimerization strongly (90 ± 7%) and thereby killing the parasite. The threo compounds not only enter more slowly but are then severely restricted from binding to haematin by the gauche alignment of their N1-H1 and C9-O12 bonds. Confirmatory molecular models allowed measurement of angles and bond lengths and computation of the electronic spectrum of a quinine-haematin complex. CONCLUSION: Differences in the antiplasmodial activity of the erythro and threo cinchona alkaloids may therefore be attributed to the cumulative effects of lipid/aqueous distribution ratio and drug-haematin interaction. Possible insights into the mechanism of chloroquine-resistance are discussed. BioMed Central 2003-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC201021/ /pubmed/14505493 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-2-26 Text en Copyright © 2003 Warhurst et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research
Warhurst, David C
Craig, John C
Adagu, Ipemida S
Meyer, David J
Lee, Sylvia Y
The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title_full The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title_fullStr The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title_full_unstemmed The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title_short The relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
title_sort relationship of physico-chemical properties and structure to the differential antiplasmodial activity of the cinchona alkaloids
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC201021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14505493
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-2-26
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