AI Article Synopsis

  • Human African trypanosomiasis is a serious disease with limited treatment options, like pentamidine and its analogs, DB75 and DB820, which are effective against trypanosomes.
  • Research indicates that these drugs accumulate in trypanosomes, particularly in the nucleus and acidocalcisomes, but their specific mechanisms of action remain unclear.
  • This study found that even less potent compounds can accumulate to higher concentrations than more potent ones, suggesting that the degree of drug accumulation alone does not determine effectiveness in killing trypanosomes, and organelle-specific accumulation may not reliably predict drug activity.

Article Abstract

Human African trypanosomiasis is a devastating disease with only a few treatment options, including pentamidine. Diamidine compounds such as pentamidine, DB75, and DB820 are potent antitrypanosomal compounds. Previous investigations have shown that diamidines accumulate to high concentrations in trypanosomes. However, the mechanism of action of this class of compounds remains unknown. A long-hypothesized mechanism of action has been binding to DNA and interference with DNA-associated enzymes. The fluorescent diamidines, DB75 and DB820, have been shown to localize not only in the DNA-containing nucleus and kinetoplast of trypanosomes but also to the acidocalcisomes. Here we investigate two series of analogs of DB75 and DB820 with various levels of in vitro antitrypanosomal activity to determine whether any correlation exists between trypanosome accumulation, distribution, and in vitro activity. Despite wide ranges of in vitro antitrypanosomal activity, all of the compounds investigated accumulated to millimolar concentrations in trypanosomes over a period of 8 h. Interestingly, some of the less potent compounds accumulated to concentrations much higher than those of more potent compounds. All of the compounds were localized to the DNA-containing nucleus and/or kinetoplast, and many were also found in the acidocalcisomes. Accumulation in the nucleus and kinetoplast should be important to the mechanism of action of these compounds. The acidocalcisomes may also play a role in the mechanism of action of these compounds. This investigation suggests that the extent of accumulation alone is not responsible for killing trypanosomes and that organelle-specific accumulation may not predict in vitro activity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1932548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.00005-07DOI Listing

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