Cargando…

Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum

Leishmania microtubules play an important role not only in cell division, but also in keeping the shape of the parasite and motility of its free-living stages. Microtubules result from the self-assembly of alpha and beta tubulins, two phylogenetically conserved and very abundant eukaryotic proteins...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel, Pérez-Pertejo, Yolanda, Reguera, Rosa M., Castro, María Ángeles, Rojo, María Victoria, Santiago, Carolina, Abad, Andrés, García, Pablo Anselmo, López-Pérez, José Luis, San Feliciano, Arturo, Balaña-Fouce, Rafael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5512185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28719882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpddr.2017.06.003
_version_ 1783250455107731456
author Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel
Pérez-Pertejo, Yolanda
Reguera, Rosa M.
Castro, María Ángeles
Rojo, María Victoria
Santiago, Carolina
Abad, Andrés
García, Pablo Anselmo
López-Pérez, José Luis
San Feliciano, Arturo
Balaña-Fouce, Rafael
author_facet Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel
Pérez-Pertejo, Yolanda
Reguera, Rosa M.
Castro, María Ángeles
Rojo, María Victoria
Santiago, Carolina
Abad, Andrés
García, Pablo Anselmo
López-Pérez, José Luis
San Feliciano, Arturo
Balaña-Fouce, Rafael
author_sort Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel
collection PubMed
description Leishmania microtubules play an important role not only in cell division, but also in keeping the shape of the parasite and motility of its free-living stages. Microtubules result from the self-assembly of alpha and beta tubulins, two phylogenetically conserved and very abundant eukaryotic proteins in kinetoplastids. The colchicine binding domain has inspired the discovery and development of several drugs currently in clinical use against parasites. However, this domain is less conserved in kinetoplastids and may be selectively targeted by new compounds. This report shows the antileishmanial effect of several series of compounds (53), derived from podophyllotoxin (a natural cyclolignan isolated from rhizomes of Podophyllum spp.) and podophyllic aldehyde, on a transgenic, fluorescence-emitting strain of Leishmania infantum. These compounds were tested on both promastigotes and amastigote-infected mouse splenocytes, and in mammalian – mouse non-infected splenocytes and liver HepG2 cells – in order to determine selective indexes of the drugs. Results obtained with podophyllotoxin derivatives showed that the hydroxyl group at position C-7α was a structural requisite to kill the parasites. On regards podophyllic aldehyde, derivatives with C9-aldehyde group integrated into a bicyclic heterostructure displayed more potent antileishmanial effects and were relatively safe for host cells. Docking studies of podophyllotoxin and podophyllic aldehyde derivatives showed that these compounds share a similar pattern of interaction at the colchicine site of Leishmania tubulin, thus pointing to a common mechanism of action. However, the results obtained suggested that despite tubulin is a remarkable target against leishmaniasis, there is a poor correlation between inhibition of tubulin polymerization and antileishmanial effect of many of the compounds tested, fact that points to alternative pathways to kill the parasites.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5512185
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55121852017-07-26 Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel Pérez-Pertejo, Yolanda Reguera, Rosa M. Castro, María Ángeles Rojo, María Victoria Santiago, Carolina Abad, Andrés García, Pablo Anselmo López-Pérez, José Luis San Feliciano, Arturo Balaña-Fouce, Rafael Int J Parasitol Drugs Drug Resist Article Leishmania microtubules play an important role not only in cell division, but also in keeping the shape of the parasite and motility of its free-living stages. Microtubules result from the self-assembly of alpha and beta tubulins, two phylogenetically conserved and very abundant eukaryotic proteins in kinetoplastids. The colchicine binding domain has inspired the discovery and development of several drugs currently in clinical use against parasites. However, this domain is less conserved in kinetoplastids and may be selectively targeted by new compounds. This report shows the antileishmanial effect of several series of compounds (53), derived from podophyllotoxin (a natural cyclolignan isolated from rhizomes of Podophyllum spp.) and podophyllic aldehyde, on a transgenic, fluorescence-emitting strain of Leishmania infantum. These compounds were tested on both promastigotes and amastigote-infected mouse splenocytes, and in mammalian – mouse non-infected splenocytes and liver HepG2 cells – in order to determine selective indexes of the drugs. Results obtained with podophyllotoxin derivatives showed that the hydroxyl group at position C-7α was a structural requisite to kill the parasites. On regards podophyllic aldehyde, derivatives with C9-aldehyde group integrated into a bicyclic heterostructure displayed more potent antileishmanial effects and were relatively safe for host cells. Docking studies of podophyllotoxin and podophyllic aldehyde derivatives showed that these compounds share a similar pattern of interaction at the colchicine site of Leishmania tubulin, thus pointing to a common mechanism of action. However, the results obtained suggested that despite tubulin is a remarkable target against leishmaniasis, there is a poor correlation between inhibition of tubulin polymerization and antileishmanial effect of many of the compounds tested, fact that points to alternative pathways to kill the parasites. Elsevier 2017-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5512185/ /pubmed/28719882 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpddr.2017.06.003 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Escudero-Martínez, José Miguel
Pérez-Pertejo, Yolanda
Reguera, Rosa M.
Castro, María Ángeles
Rojo, María Victoria
Santiago, Carolina
Abad, Andrés
García, Pablo Anselmo
López-Pérez, José Luis
San Feliciano, Arturo
Balaña-Fouce, Rafael
Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title_full Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title_fullStr Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title_full_unstemmed Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title_short Antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on Leishmania infantum
title_sort antileishmanial activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition of podophyllotoxin derivatives on leishmania infantum
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5512185/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28719882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpddr.2017.06.003
work_keys_str_mv AT escuderomartinezjosemiguel antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT perezpertejoyolanda antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT reguerarosam antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT castromariaangeles antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT rojomariavictoria antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT santiagocarolina antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT abadandres antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT garciapabloanselmo antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT lopezperezjoseluis antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT sanfelicianoarturo antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum
AT balanafoucerafael antileishmanialactivityandtubulinpolymerizationinhibitionofpodophyllotoxinderivativesonleishmaniainfantum