1. Academic Validation
  2. Synthesis and in vitro evaluation of 9-anilino-3,6-diaminoacridines active against a multidrug-resistant strain of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum

Synthesis and in vitro evaluation of 9-anilino-3,6-diaminoacridines active against a multidrug-resistant strain of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum

  • J Med Chem. 1994 May 13;37(10):1486-94. doi: 10.1021/jm00036a014.
S A Gamage 1 N Tepsiri P Wilairat S J Wojcik D P Figgitt R K Ralph W A Denny
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cancer Research Laboratory, School of Medicine, University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Abstract

A series of 9-anilinoacridines have been prepared and evaluated for their activity against a multidrug-resistant K1 strain of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum in erythrocyte suspensions. 3,6-Diamino substitution on the acridine ring resulted in lower mammalian cell cytotoxicity and higher antiparasitic activity than Other substitution patterns, providing compounds with the highest in vitro therapeutic indices. A new synthesis of 3,6-diamino-9-anilinoacridines, via reduction of the corresponding diazides, gives much higher yields than traditional methods. Within the subset of 3,6-diamino-9-anilinoacridines, there was considerable tolerance to substitution at the 1'-anilino position. In a sharp divergence with structure-activity relationships for high mammalian cell toxicity and Anticancer effects, derivatives bearing electron-withdrawing 1'-substituents (e.g., SO2-NHR and CONHR) showed the most potent antimalarial activity (IC50 values of 10-20 nM). Representative compounds were shown to be potent inhibitors of the DNA strand-passing activity of human Topoisomerase II and of the DNA decatenation activity of the corresponding Parasite enzyme. The 1'-SO2NH2derivative 7n completely inhibited strand passage by Jurkat Topoisomerase II at 20 microM, and an increase in linear DNA (indicative of inhibition of religation) was seen at or above 1 microM. It also inhibited the decatenating activity of the parasite Topoisomerase II at 6 microM and above. In contrast, the analogous compound without the 3,6-diamino substituent was inactive in both assays up to 100 microM. Overall, there was a positive relationship between the ability of the drugs to inhibit Parasite growth in culture and their ability to inhibit parasite Topoisomerase II activity in an isolated Enzyme assay. The 1'-SO2NH2 derivative 7n showed a high IVTI (1000) and was a potent inhibitor of both P. falciparum in vitro (IC50 20 nM) and P. falciparum-derived Topoisomerase II. However, the compound was inactive against Plasmodium berghei in mice; reasons may include rapid metabolic inactivation (possibly by N-acetylation) and/or poor distribution.

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