Publications by authors named "Maria L Leon"

Article Synopsis
  • Next-generation antimalarials need to be able to cure malaria and block its transmission, highlighting the importance of discovering new druggable molecular pathways.
  • Researchers identified CLK3 as a promising drug target, using a selective inhibitor that affected multiple life stages of the malaria parasite and validated its role through chemogenetics.
  • Inhibiting CLK3 led to the down-regulation of over 400 key parasite genes, resulting in rapid killing of the parasite and prevention of gametocyte development, suggesting potential for both curing and preventing malaria transmission.
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Spread of parasite resistance to artemisinin threatens current frontline antimalarial therapies, highlighting the need for new drugs with alternative modes of action. Since only 0.2-1% of asexual parasites differentiate into sexual, transmission-competent forms, targeting this natural bottleneck provides a tangible route to interrupt disease transmission and mitigate resistance selection.

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Malaria is still one of the most prevalent parasitic infections in the world, with half of the world's population at risk for malaria. The effectiveness of current antimalarial therapies, even that of the most recent class of antimalarial drugs (artemisinin-combination therapies, ACTs), is under continuous threat by the spread of resistant Plasmodium strains. As a consequence, there is still an urgent requirement for new antimalarial drugs.

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Since the appearance of resistance to the current front-line antimalarial treatments, ACTs (artemisinin combination therapies), the discovery of novel chemical entities to treat the disease is recognized as a major global health priority. From the GSK antimalarial set, we identified an aminoxadiazole with an antiparasitic profile comparable with artemisinin (1), with no cross-resistance in a resistant strains panel and a potential new mode of action. A medicinal chemistry program allowed delivery of compounds such as 19 with high solubility in aqueous media, an acceptable toxicological profile, and oral efficacy.

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As part of our medicinal chemistry program's ongoing search for compounds with antimalarial activity, we prepared a series of thiazole analogs and conducted a SAR study analyzing their in vitro activities against the chloroquine-sensitive Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 strain. The results indicate that modifications of the N-aryl amide group linked to the thiazole ring are the most significant in terms of in vitro antimalarial activity, leading to compounds with high antimalarial potency and low cytotoxicity in HepG2 cell lines. Furthermore, the observed SAR implies that non-bulky, electron-withdrawing groups are preferred at ortho position on the phenyl ring, whereas small atoms such as H or F are preferred at para position.

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Antiparasitic oral drugs have been associated to lipophilic molecules due to their intrinsic permeability. However, these kind of molecules are associated to numerous adverse effects, which have been extensively studied. Within the Tres Cantos Antimalarial Set (TCAMS) we have identified two small, soluble and simple hits that even presenting antiplasmodial activities in the range of 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • Silent myocardial ischemia is common in type 2 diabetics, making traditional symptom-based diagnosis unreliable; research focuses on the link between blood lipid levels and ischemia.
  • The study evaluated 220 asymptomatic type 2 diabetics in Havana over four years, using advanced imaging techniques (gSPECT) and confirmed findings through coronary angiography; classification trees identified specific lipid level cutoffs predictive of silent myocardial ischemia.
  • Results showed that 29.1% had silent ischemia, with significant differences in lipid profiles: gSPECT-positive patients had higher total cholesterol, LDL, and triglycerides, while HDL was notably lower; men exhibited a higher prevalence of ischemia compared to women.
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In 2010, GlaxoSmithKline published the structures of 13533 chemical starting points for antimalarial lead identification. By using an agglomerative structural clustering technique followed by computational filters such as antimalarial activity, physicochemical properties, and dissimilarity to known antimalarial structures, we have identified 47 starting points for lead optimization. Their structures are provided.

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A series of diaryl ether substituted 4-pyridones have been identified as having potent antimalarial activity superior to that of chloroquine against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro and murine Plasmodium yoelii in vivo. These were derived from the anticoccidial drug clopidol through a systematic study of the effects of varying the side chain on activity. Relative to clopidol the most active compounds show >500-fold improvement in IC50 for inhibition of P.

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