Microtubule target for new antileishmanial drugs based on ethyl 3-haloacetamidobenzoates.

J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem

Department of Parasitology and Mycologie médicale, BioCiT UPRES EA 1155, Faculty of Pharmacy, Nantes University, 1 rue Gaston Veil, 44035 Nantes, France.

Published: June 2006

A new family of antimicrotubule drugs named (3-haloacetamidobenzoyl) ureas and ethyl 3-haloacetamidobenzoates were found to be cytotoxic to the Leishmania parasite protozoa. While the benzoylureas were shown to strongly inhibit in vitro mammalian brain microtubule assembly, the ethyl ester derivatives were characterized as very poor inhibitors of this process. Ethyl 3-chloroacetamidobenzoate, MF29, was found to be the most efficient drug on the promastigote stage of three Leishmania species (IC50: 0.3-1.8 microM). MF29 maintained its activity against the clinical relevant intracellular stage of L. mexicana with IC50 value of 0.33 microM. It was the only compound that exhibits a high activity on all the Leishmania species tested. This compound appeared to alter parasite microtubule organisation as demonstrated by using antibodies directed against microtubule components and more precisely the class of microtubule decorated by the MAP2-like protein. It is interesting to notice that this MAP2-like protein was identified for the first time in a Leishmania parasite

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14756360600700699DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ethyl 3-haloacetamidobenzoates
8
leishmania parasite
8
leishmania species
8
map2-like protein
8
microtubule
5
microtubule target
4
target antileishmanial
4
antileishmanial drugs
4
drugs based
4
ethyl
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!