998 resultados para Antimalarial activity


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A malária é um sério problema de saúde pública mundial, acarretando perdas socioeconômicas e contribuindo para o subdesenvolvimento dos países afetados. Neste contexto, faz-se necessário estudar a relação entre as propriedades eletrônicas e a capacidade antioxidante de derivados quinolínicos na atividade antimalárica, o que servirá de subsídio para propor protótipos eficazes na terapêutica da doença. Nesta dissertação, foram utilizadas técnicas de modelagem molecular, no estudo da relação estrutura e atividade antioxidante correlacionada com a atividade antimalárica, no processo de seleção de grupamentos e parâmetros eletrônicos e conformacionais que permitam aperfeiçoar a atividade farmacológica e reduzir a toxicidade dos derivados. A análise dos valores de HOMO e PI indicou que o tautômero imino-quinolina é, provavelmente, melhor antioxidante que o tautômero amino-quinolina. Também se observou que o equilíbrio dos tautômeros é mais deslocalizado para a estrutura amino-quinolina na fase gasosa, e em água e clorofórmio no método PCM, apresentando valores de barreiras de energia da faixa de 10,78 Kcal/mol, 21,65 Kcal/mol e 22,04 Kcal/mol, respectivamente. Assim pôdese observar que nos derivados análogos de quinolina, os grupos elétrons-doadores mostraram destaque na redução do potencial de ionização, como os grupos amina na posição 8 substituído por um grupo alquilamina. Nos derivados da associação de 4- e 8-amino-quinolina notou-se que a presença de um segundo nitrogênio no grupo quinolina diminui seu potencial antioxidante, com exceção da posição 5, representando o grupo de maior destaque na redução do potencial de ionização e conseqüente provável elevada atividade antioxidante.

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Parahancornia fasciculata (Poir.) Benoist (Apocynaceae), também conhecida como Parahancornia amapa (Hub.) Ducke, é uma espécie vegetal empregada popularmente no tratamento da malária, infecções no útero, gastrite, anemia, problemas respiratórios, entre outros. Os objetivos do presente trabalho foram realizar o estudo fitoquímico, avaliar a toxicidade oral aguda e a atividade antimalárica in vitro e in vivo de extratos, frações e substância isolada obtidas a partir de cascas do caule de P. fasciculata. Foram realizados dois tipos de extrações com o pó das cascas de P. fasciculata, por maceração / percolação, com etanol 96°GL e diclorometano, esta última tendo sido realizada a com o pó das cascas alcalinizado com hidróxido de amônio, obtendo-se os extratos secos EEPF e EDAPF, respectivamente. Uma terceira extração foi realizada a partir do EEPF por aquecimento sob refluxo, sucessivamente, com Hex:DCM (1:1), AcOEt:DCM (1:1) e AcOEt. EEPF foi, também, submetido a fracionamento por extrações ácido-base resultando nas frações de neutros (EEPFN) e de alcalóides (EEPFA). A prospecção fitoquímica realizada com o EEPF foi desenvolvida por CCD em cromatoplacas de sílica gel tendo sido detectada a presença de triterpenos, esteróides, heterosídeos flavônicos, saponinas, polifenóis, taninos, heterosídeos antracênicos e heterosídeos cardiotônicos. EDAPF foi submetido à cromatografia em coluna de sílica gel. Foram recolhidas 30 frações sendo que as frações Fr1-3, Fr4, Fr5-7 e Fr11 concentraram a maior parte da massa do extrato cromatografado. Da Fr5-7 foi isolada uma mistura de ésteres do lupeol que representam os componentes majoritários do EDAPF. Esta fração passou por um processo de hidrólise alcalina e o produto obtido (Fr5-7Hid) foi analisado por espectrometrias no IV, RMN de 1H e 13C e foi identificado como o triterpeno lupeol. A fração insolúvel em AcOEt obtida a partir do EEPF, por aquecimento sob refluxo, apresentou resultado positivo para o teste de proantocianidinas e foi submetido a doseamento desta classe de metabólitos. Os resultados foram expressos em porcentagem dos teores para a amostra não diluída (10,46±0,3419%), amostra diluída a 1:10 (9,94± 0,1598%) e amostra diluída a 1:100 (10,55± 0,9299%). A avaliação da atividade antiplasmódica in vitro em culturas de cepas W2 de Plasmodium falciparum foi realizada pelo teste da Proteína II Rica em Histidina (HRP-II) tendo sido testados EEPF, EEPFN, EEPFA, Fr1-3, Fr4, Fr5-7(ésteres do lupeol), Fr11 e o Fr5-7Hid (lupeol). Os melhores resultados obtidos foram para EEPF, EEPFA E EEPFN (CI50= ~ 50 μg/mL) sendo considerados moderadamente ativos. As demais amostras apresentaram CI50 > 50 μg/mL e foram consideradas inativas. Realizou-se também a avaliação da atividade antimalárica in vivo em camundongos fêmeas suíços infectados com cepas ANKA de P. berghei com o EEPF e o EEPF-HEX:DCM (1:1) em concentrações de 500, 250 e 125mg/kg de peso. EEPF foi parcialmente ativo, somente no 8° dia, em todas as concentrações. Já EEPF-HEX:DCM (1:1) foi parcialmente ativo na dose de 500mg/kg de peso e nas demais doses foi inativo. O teste de toxicidade oral aguda foi realizado em camundongos fêmeas suíços, pelo método da dose fixa (5.000mg/kg), com EEPF e não apresentou nenhum sinal de toxicidade evidente, o que foi confirmado pela ausência de alterações nos exames anátomohistopatológicos realizados.

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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Horticultura) - FCA

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Pós-graduação em Química - IQ

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Novel leads are urgently required for designing antimalarials due to the reduced efficacy of presently available drugs. The malaria parasite has a unique reaction of heme polymerization, which has attracted much attention in the recent past as a target for the design of antimalarial drugs. The process is hampered by non-availability of a proper assay method. Currently available methods are cumbersome and require advanced instrumentation or radioactive substrates. Here, we are describing an assay for hemozoin formation that is simple and reproducible. This assay has routinely been used by us for the identification of potential compounds with antimalarial activity.

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The fatty acid synthesis type II pathway has received considerable interest as a candidate therapeutic target in Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood-stage infections. This apicoplast-resident pathway, distinct from the mammalian type I process, includes FabI. Here, we report synthetic chemistry and transfection studies concluding that Plasmodium FabI is not the target of the antimalarial activity of triclosan, an inhibitor of bacterial FabI. Disruption of fabI in P. falciparum or the rodent parasite P. berghei does not impede blood-stage growth. In contrast, mosquito-derived, FabI-deficient P. berghei sporozoites are markedly less infective for mice and typically fail to complete liver-stage development in vitro. This defect is characterized by an inability to form intrahepatic merosomes that normally initiate blood-stage infections. These data illuminate key differences between liver- and blood-stage parasites in their requirements for host versus de novo synthesized fatty acids, and create new prospects for stage-specific antimalarial interventions.

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The study was a comparison of bioassay and HPLC analysis of artesunate (ARTS) and dihydroartemisinin (DHA) in plasma. ARTS and DHA in plasma samples from patients treated with ARTS were quantified by HPLC and expressed as DHA. DHA-equivalents in the same plasma samples were measured using a standardised parasite culture technique. DHA concentrations estimated by both methods were highly correlated (bioassay = 0.96 x HPLC + 11.0; r(2) = 0.92). At high concentrations ( > 12 000 nmol/l) bioassay sometimes overestimated DHA. Bioassay of active drug in plasma correlates well with specific chemical analysis by HPLC. ARTS and DHA appear to account for the total antimalarial activity in plasma after ARTS administration. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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This review highlights structural and biosynthetic work on a group of nitrogen-functionalised terpenes that are almost exclusively found in marine invertebrates and the animals that feed on them. The chemical functionality reviewed includes isocyanides, isothiocyanates, formamides, thiocyanates, isocyanates, and dichloroimines. The literature through mid 2003 is reviewed and there are 143 citations.

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Parasite resistance to antimalarial drugs is a serious threat to human health, and novel agents that act on enzymes essential for parasite metabolism, such as proteases, are attractive targets for drug development. Recent studies have shown that clinically utilized human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease inhibitors can inhibit the in vitro growth of Plasmodium falciparum at or below concentrations found in human plasma after oral drug administration. The most potent in vitro antimalarial effects have been obtained for parasites treated with saquinavir, ritonavir, or lopinavir, findings confirmed in this study for a genetically distinct P. falciparum line (3D7). To investigate the potential in vivo activity of antiretroviral protease inhibitors (ARPIs) against malaria, we examined the effect of ARPI combinations in a murine model of malaria. In mice infected with Plasmodium chabaudi AS and treated orally with ritonavir-saquinavir or ritonavir-lopinavir, a delay in patency and a significant attenuation of parasitemia were observed. Using modeling and ligand docking studies we examined putative ligand binding sites of ARPIs in aspartyl proteases of P. falciparum (plasmepsins II and IV) and P. chabaudi (plasmepsin) and found that these in silico analyses support the antimalarial activity hypothesized to be mediated through inhibition of these enzymes. In addition, in vitro enzyme assays demonstrated that P. falciparum plasmepsins II and IV are both inhibited by the ARPIs saquinavir, ritonavir, and lopinavir. The combined results suggest that ARPIs have useful antimalarial activity that may be especially relevant in geographical regions where HIV and P. falciparum infections are both endemic.

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Malaria, also popularly known as maleita , intermittent fever, paludism, impaludism, third fever or fourth fever, is an acute infectious febrile disease, which, in human beings, is caused by four species: Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae and P. ovale. Malaria, one of the main infectious diseases in the world, is the most important parasitoses, with 250 million annual cases and more than 1 million deaths per year, mainly in children younger than live years of age. The prophylactic and therapeutic arsenal against malaria is quite restricted, since all the antimalarials currently in use have some limitation. Many plant species belonging to several families have been tested in vivo, using the murine experimental model Plasmodium berghei or in vitro against P. falciparum, and this search has been directed toward plants with antithermal, antimalarial or antiinflammatory properties used in popular Brazilian bolk medicine. Studies assessing the biological activity of medicinal plant essential oils have revealed activities of interest, such as insecticidal, spasmolytic and antiplasmodic action. It has also been scientifically established that around 60% of essential oils have antifungal properties and that 35% exhibit antibacterial properties. In our investigation, essential oils were obtained from the species Vanillosmopsis arborea, Lippia sidoides and Croton zethneri which are found in the bioregion of Araripe-Ceará. The chemical composition of these essential oils was partially characterized and the presence of monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes. The acute toxicity of these oils was assessed in healthy mice at different doses applied on a single day and on four consecutive days, and in vitro cytotoxicity in HeLa and Raw cell lines was determined at different concentrations. The in vivo tests obtained lethal dose values of 7,1 mg/Kg (doses administered on a single day) and 1,8 mg/Kg (doses administered over four days) for 50% of the animals. In the in vitro tests, the inhibitory concentration for 50% of cell growth in Hela cell lines was 588 μg/mL (essential oil from C. zethneri after 48 h), from 340-555 μg/mL (essential oil from L. sidoides, after 24 and 48 h). The essential oil from V. arborea showed no cytotoxicity and none of the essential oils were cytotoxic in Raw cell lines. These data suggest a moderate toxicity in the essential XVIII oils under study, a finding that does not impede their testing in in vivo antimalarial assays. Was shown the antimalarial activity of the essential oils in mice infected with P. berghei was assessed. The three species showed antimalarial activity from 36%-57% for the essential oil from the stem of V. arborea; from 32%-82% for the essential oil from the leaves of L. sidoides and from 40%-70% of reduction for the essential oil from the leaves of C. zethneri. This is the first study showing evidence of antimalarial activity with these species from northeast Brazil. Further studies to isolate the active ingredients of these oils are needed to determine if a single active ingredient accounts for the antimalarial activity or if a complex integration of all the compounds present occurs, a situation reflected in their biological activity

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The 5-Isopropyl-3-[4-(6-methoxy-quinolin-8-ylamino)-pentyl]-2,2-dimethyl-imidazolidin-4-one (ValPQacet) was sinthesized through acylation of the anti-malarial primaquine with α-valine and subsequent reaction of the resulting -aminoamide with propanone (Sheme 1).Imidazolidin-4-ones of the anti malarial primaquine are being sinthesized to develop new variants in order to improve more effective treatments against malaria . Recently it has been observed that primaquine derivates could have effect in a new kind of yeast . To study the fungicidal activity against Candida albicans, Candida tropicalis, Issatchenkia orientalis, Sacharomyces cerevisae, the ValPQacet was put in the form of the hydrochloride salt. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) could be determined for all yeast in the concentration range assayed. Also was determined MIC’s of primaquine hydrochloride salt for all yeast, and this shows that the parent drug is less active than our compound. Further studies are being performed to determine viability and cellular injury with this drugs.

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The in vitro activity of the crude hydroalcoholic extract of the aerial parts of Miconia langsdorffii Cogn. was evaluated against the promastigote forms of L. amazonensis, the causative agent of cutaneous leishmaniasis in humans. The bioassay-guided fractionation of this extract led to identification of the triterpenes ursolic acid and oleanolic acid as the major compounds in the fraction that displayed the highest activity. Several ursolic acid semi-synthetic derivatives were prepared, to find out whether more active compounds could be obtained. Among these ursolic acid-derived substances, the C-28 methyl ester derivative exhibited the best antileishmanial activity.

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Seven tetrahydrofuran lignans, isolated from Nectandra megapotamica (Lauraceae), were evaluated for their in vitro antileishmanial and antimalarial activities. Among the evaluated compounds, machilin-G (1a) and veraguensin (2a) showed the highest antileishmanial activities, displaying for both compounds an IC(50) value of 18 mu g/mL and an IC(50) value of 36 mu g/mL, while galgravin (1b), nectandrin-A (1c), nectandrin-B (1d), calopeptin (2b) and ganshisandrine (3) were inactive against Leishmania donovani. In the antimalarial assay against Plasmodium falciparum, it was observed that calopeptin (2b) displayed moderate activity, with IC(50) values of 3800 ng/mL (136 clone) and 3900 ng/mL (W2 clone), while the lignans 1a-1d, 2a and 3 were inactive. In order to compare the effect on the parasites with toxicity to mammalian cells, the cytotoxic activity of the isolated compounds were evaluated against the Vero cells, showing that all evaluated tetrahydrofuran lignans exhibited no cytotoxicity at the maximum dose tested. Copyright (C) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Austroplenckia populnea (Celastraceae), known as ""marmelinho do campo"", is used in Brazilian folk medicine as antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and antitumoural agent. The aim of the present work was to evaluate the antimicrobial. antileishmanial and antimalarial activities of the crude hydroalcoholic extract of A. populnea (CHE) and some of its isolated compounds. The phytochemical study of the CHE was carried Out affording the isolation of methyl populnoate (1), populnoic acid (2), and stigmast-5-en-3-O-beta-(D-glucopyranoside) (3). This is the first time that the presence of compound 3 in A. populnea is reported. The results showed that the CHE presents antifungal and antibacterial activities, especially against Candida glabrata and Candida albicans, for which the CHE showed IC(50) values of 0.7 mu g mL(-1) and 5.5 mu g mL(-1), respectively, while amphotericin B showed an IC(50) value of 0.1 mu g mL(-1) against both microorganisms. Compounds 1-3 were inactive against all tested microorganisms. In the antileishmanial activity test against Leishmania donovani, the CHE showed an IC(50) value of 52 mu g mL(-1), while compounds 2 and 3 displayed an IC(50) value of 18 mu g mL(-1). In the antimalarial assay against Plasmodium falciparum (D6 and W2 clones), it was observed that all evaluated samples were inactive. In order to compare the effect on the parasites with the toxicity to mammalian cells, the cytotoxicity activity of the isolated compounds was evaluated against Vero cells, showing that all evaluated samples exhibited no cytotoxicity at the maximum dose tested.

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In this review we discuss the ongoing situation of human malaria in the Brazilian Amazon, where it is endemic causing over 610,000 new acute cases yearly, a number which is on the increase. This is partly a result of drug resistant parasites and new antimalarial drugs are urgently needed. The approaches we have used in the search of new drugs during decades are now reviewed and include ethnopharmocology, plants randomly selected, extracts or isolated substances from plants shown to be active against the blood stage parasites in our previous studies. Emphasis is given on the medicinal plant Bidens pilosa, proven to be active against the parasite blood stages in tests using freshly prepared plant extracts. The anti-sporozoite activity of one plant used in the Brazilian endemic area to prevent malaria is also described, the so called "Indian beer" (Ampelozizyphus amazonicus, Rhamnaceae). Freshly prepared extracts from the roots of this plant were totally inactive against blood stage parasites, but active against sporozoites of Plasmodium gallinaceum or the primary exoerythrocytic stages reducing tissue parasitism in inoculated chickens. This result will be of practical importance if confirmed in mammalian malaria. Problems and perspectives in the search for antimalarial drugs are discussed as well as the toxicological and clinical trials to validate some of the active plants for public health use in Brazil.