Publications by authors named "K L Loi"

Article Synopsis
  • Drug resistance is making existing antimalarials ineffective, highlighting the urgent need for new treatments.
  • Researchers identified a promising new chemotype, cyclopropyl carboxamide, through screening a library of compounds, leading to the development of a strong candidate, WJM280, which is effective against malaria without harming human cells.
  • Further studies revealed that resistant parasites have mutations in the cytochrome b gene, confirming it as the drug target, but improving the compound's stability and effectiveness in mouse models still needs to be addressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The emergence of resistance against current antimalarial treatments has necessitated the need for the development of novel antimalarial chemotypes. Toward this goal, we recently optimised the antimalarial activity of the dihydroquinazolinone scaffold and showed it targeted PfATP4. Here, we deconstruct the lactam moiety of the tricyclic dihydroquinazolinone scaffold and investigate the structure-activity relationship of the truncated scaffold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To contribute to the global effort to develop new antimalarial therapies, we previously disclosed initial findings on the optimization of the dihydroquinazolinone-3-carboxamide class that targets PfATP4. Here we report on refining the aqueous solubility and metabolic stability to improve the pharmacokinetic profile and consequently in vivo efficacy. We show that the incorporation of heterocycle systems in the 8-position of the scaffold was found to provide the greatest attainable balance between parasite activity, aqueous solubility, and metabolic stability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Emerging resistance to current antimalarials is reducing their effectiveness and therefore there is a need to develop new antimalarial therapies. Toward this goal, high throughput screens against the P. falciparum asexual parasite identified the pyrazolopyridine 4-carboxamide scaffold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The RNA-guided ribonuclease CRISPR-Cas13 enables adaptive immunity in bacteria and programmable RNA manipulation in heterologous systems. Cas13s share limited sequence similarity, hindering discovery of related or ancestral systems. To address this, we developed an automated structural-search pipeline to identify an ancestral clade of Cas13 (Cas13an) and further trace Cas13 origins to defense-associated ribonucleases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF