A new molecule that could become a first fully synthetic, one-dose treatment for malaria has been recently developed.
Malaria is a mosquito-borne disease caused by the bite of a female anopheles mosquito. A research team from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine has recently developed a molecule that has the potential to become a first fully synthetic, one-dose treatment for malaria.// In a paper published today in the journal Nature Communications, the multinational team describe the molecule, known as E209, as meeting the key requirements of the Medicines for Malaria Venture drug candidate profiles.
‘A newly developed molecule has the potential to become the first synthetic, one-dose treatment for malaria.’
The molecule is effective against parasites expressing the key genetic marker for artemisinin resistance in in vitro studies.The control and elimination of malaria requires effective treatment strategies. For several years, this has been in the form of artemisinin-based combination strategies (ACTs), which has seen artemisinin based drugs combined with a drug partner that has a longer half-life.
The semi-synthetic ACTs have had a significant impact on malaria treatment however, the search for a fully synthetic alternative has been on for over a decade. The growing problem of resistance to current ACTs can lead to complete treatment failure.
This has led the group to look at alternatives to retain the effectiveness against parasites with the known genetic markers of resistance while at the same time being fast acting.
LSTM's Deputy Director, Professor Steve Ward, is a senior author on the paper. He said: "Extensive molecular investigations have demonstrated that mutations in the K13 gene are makers for artemisinin susceptibility and are linked to drug resistance in some malaria parasites.
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The other lead author Professor Paul O'Neill of the University of Liverpool, said: "E209 is a second-generation peroxide based drug, designed at Liverpool, with significant improvements over the gold standard antimalarial treatment artesunate. E209 contains a unique core with two endoperoxide units; through medicinal chemistry optimization, the stability, potency and pharmacokinetics of this class has now been optimized.
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The extensive data set obtained for E209 was obtained through a global collaborative network of scientists around the world allowing this drug discovery project to be rapidly advanced.
Source-Eurekalert