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Medicinal Chemistry of Antimalarials: Kim J.B

The document discusses medicinal chemistry of antimalarials. It describes the life cycle and species of Plasmodium parasites that cause malaria in humans. It then summarizes several classes of antimalarial drugs, including their structures, mechanisms of action, and examples like chloroquine, primaquine, mefloquine, and artemisinins. Malaria remains a major global health problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
140 views

Medicinal Chemistry of Antimalarials: Kim J.B

The document discusses medicinal chemistry of antimalarials. It describes the life cycle and species of Plasmodium parasites that cause malaria in humans. It then summarizes several classes of antimalarial drugs, including their structures, mechanisms of action, and examples like chloroquine, primaquine, mefloquine, and artemisinins. Malaria remains a major global health problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa.

Uploaded by

precy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY

OF ANTIMALARIALS

Kim J.B.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 1
What is Malaria?
• Is a vector born infectious disease caused by protozoan parasites
(female anopheles mosquito). (Vector means, it does not cause disease
itself but spread infection by conveying pathogens from one host to
another)
• It is widespread in tropical and subtropical regions
• Four species of the genus plasmodium infect the humans, they are: P.
falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae.
• P. falciparum is the most deadly malaria parasite and most prevalent in
Africa.
• P. vivax is the most common cause of relapse if treatment was not
completed.
• Although infections with the fifth parasite P. knowlesi, is an important
cause of human malaria in the islands of Borneo and Peninsular Malaysia.
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 2
Parasitic infection caused by various species of Plasmodium - transmitted
via bite of female anopheles mosquito

Symptoms:
High/periodic fever
Headache
Chills
Anorexia
Body ache
Fatigue

P. falciparum may progress to severe malaria xtized by:


Metabolic acidosis
Anaemia
Delirium and even death

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 3
Malaria Globally and in Nigeria

• Globally, 3.3 billion people at risk


• 228 million cases in 2018, 405,000
deaths (WHO, 2019)
• Sub-Saharan Africa & parts of Asia
most affected.
• 80% of cases & 90% of deaths occur in
Africa.
• Nigeria average prevalence rate is 71%.
• Nigeria recorded 35% malaria death in 2015.
• Malaria is responsible for 60% outpatient visit to health facilities, 30%
childhood death in children under 1 year and 11% maternal death.
• The financial loss due to malaria annually is estimated to be about 132billion
Naira in form of treatment cost, prevention, loss of man hours etc.
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 4
Human species:

• Plasmodium falciparum (Malignant tertian malaria)

• Plasmodium vivax (Benign tertian malaria)

• Plasmodium ovale (tertian fever)

• Plasmodium malariae (Quartan malaria)

• Plasmodium knowlesi

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 5
MALARIA CONTROL STRATEGIES
• Promotion of environmental sanitation
• Use of insecticides
• Indoor residual spraying with insecticides e.g. DDT, Pyrethroids
• Use of insecticide treated nets (ITN’s & LLITN’s)
• Biological Control
• Genetically modified mosquitoes
• Malaria Vaccines development
• Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPTi & IPT)
• Pharmacotherapy

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 6
Life Cycle of Plasmodium parasite

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 7
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 8
Classification of Antimalarials
• May be classified on the basis of:
• Stage of parasite life cycle on which they act
• Blood Schizonticides e.g. Chloroquine, quinine, artemisinins
• Tissue Schizonticides e.g. Primaquine
• Gametocytocides e.g. - Chloroquine & Quinine – P. vivax & P. ovale
• Primaquine – gametocytocidal on all human malarial parasites
• Sporontocides e.g. Primaquine and Chlorproguanil
• Two important concepts:
• Clinical cure
• Radical cure

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 9
Chemical Classification of Antimalarials
• 1. Cinchona Alkaloids e.g. Quinine, Quinidine
• 2. 4-Aminoquinolines e.g. Chloroquine, Amodiaquine, Sontoquine
• 3. 8-Aminoquiolines e.g. Primaquine, Tafenoquine, Bulaquine
• 4. Quinoline Methanols e.g. Mefloquine
• 5. Phenanthrene methanols e.g. Halofantrine
• 6. Sulphonamides & Sulphones e.g. Sulphadoxine, Dapsone
• 7. Diaminopyrimidines e.g. Pyrimethamine
• 8. Biguanides e.g. Proguanil, Chlorproguanil, Cycloguanil
• 9. Naphthoquinones e.g. Atovaquone
• 10. Sesquiterpene lactone e.g. Artemisinin, Artemether, Artesunate
• 11. Antibiotics e.g. Doxycycline, Clindamycin, Ciprofloxacin
• 12.07/31/2022
Acridines e.g. Mepacrine Kim J. B. 10
1. Cinchona Alkaloids

• Four alkaloids produced by the Cinchona tree Cinchona officinalis.


• Enantiomeric pair quinine and quinidine and their desmethoxy
analogues cinchonidine (for quinine) and cinchonine (for quinidine)
• Have four (4) asymmetric Carbon centres.
• Quinine is the most used but is less potent and less toxic than
Quinidine.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 11
SAR of Cinchona Alkaloids…
• Modification of the sec-alcohol at C-9 through oxidation, esterification etc
diminishes activity.
• The quinuclidine portion is not necessary for activity
• An alkyl tertiary amine at C-9 is important for activity.
• Oxidation of the vinyl group (-CH=CH2) to carboxyl (-COOH) group (as in
quitanine) leads to complete loss of activity.
• Esterification of the carboxyl group restores the activity partially.
• Demethylation of quinine with HBr/AcOH or BCl3 in CH2Cl2 yield cupreine (A
natural alkaloid obtained in cuprea bark) with remarkable reduction in activity.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 12
Cinchona Alkaloids….
• Mechanism of Action
• Similar to Chloroquine ( see next group)
• Metabolism
• Quinine is metabolized in the liver by CYP3A4 to the 2’-hydroxy derivative
• Followed by additional hydroxylation on the quinuclidine to give the 2,2’-
dihydroxy derivative as the major metabolite
• Side Effect
• Cinchonism: a toxic syndrome - tinnitus, headache, nausea, and disturbed
vision.
• Can also cause premature contractions in late pregnancy.
• Quinine is an effective Blood schizonticide
• Quinidine is used as an antiarrhythmic – importance of stereochemistry.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 13
2. 4-Aminoquinolines
• Developed based on the Quinine structure
• Examples: Chloroquine, Amodiaquine, Sontoquine.
• Have an asymmetric centre a position C-9.
• Both isomers are active and is commonly used as a racemic mixture.
• The 7-Chloro group and terminal amino group are important for
activity.
• Alkylation at C-3 and C-8 diminishes activity.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 14
4-Aminoquinoline…
• Formulated as the phosphate or hydrochloride salt.
• Mode of Action
• Accumulates in the acidic food vacuole (pH 5.5) and interferes
with the process of haem detoxification.
• The drugs form a complex with haem in which the aromatic
quinoline ring π bonds to the porphyrin nucleus

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 15
4-Aminoquinolines….
• Chloroquine is the most important member but its use has
diminished due to extensive resistance.
• Reduced uptake and transport of chloroquine to food vacuole of
plasmodium.
• Hydroxychloroquine is less toxic but mostly used for treating
rheumatoid arthritis.
• Metabolism
• It is metabolized via N-dealkylation by CYP2D and CYP3A4 isoforms
• Other Uses of CQ
• Extraintestinal amoebiasis/Hepatic amoebiasis
• Rheumatoid arthritis
• Discoid lupus erythematosus

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 16
4-Aminoquinolines…
• Amodiaquine
• Amodiaquine is similar to Chloroquine but is associated with a
higher incidence of hepatitis than CQ due to quinone imine
formation.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 17
4-Aminoquinoline…
• Synthesis of Amodiaquine
• Paracetamol undergoes amino-methylation reaction (Mannich
reaction) using formaldehyde and diethylamine.
• Saponification of this with sodium hydroxide gives the amino
derivative, which in turn reacts with 4,7-dichloroquinoline to
afford amodiaquine.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 18
3. 8-Aminoquinolines
• Similar to the 4-aminoquinolines
• E.g. Primaquine: 6-methoxy-8-(4-amino-1-methylbutyl)
aminoquinoline.
• They are all active against the liver forms of the parasite
• latent tissue forms of P. vivax & P. ovale (Hypnozoites)
• hepatic stage of P. falciparum
• They are inactive against the erythrocytic stage of the parasite
but gametocidal against all strains of Plasmodium.
• All can cause haemolytic anaemia in erythrocytic glucose-6-
phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficient patients.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 19
8-Aminoquinoline…
• All agents in this series have a five Carbon alkyl linkage or bridge
between the two Nitrogen atoms.
• With the exception of pentaquine, the other three have one
asymmetric carbon.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 20
8-Aminoquinoline…
• Primaquine is the most popular member of this class in current
clinical use for clearing the hepatic forms of the parasite (tissue
schizonticide).
• Mechanism of Action
• Poorly understood
• May involve disruption of the parasite mitochondria.
• May generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) which cause oxidative damage
to the essential cellular components of the parasite
• Primaquine is metabolized into carboxyprimaquine (major
metabolite) and N-acetylprimaquine, hydroxyprimaquine and
conjuates as minor metabolites.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 21
8-Aminoquinoline….
• Tafenoquine:
• More active slowly metabolized analog of primaquine
• has advantage that it can be given on weekly basis.
• Bulaquine:
• Congener of primaquine
• Comparable antirelapse activity when used for 5 days
• Partly metabolized to primaquine
• Better tolerated in G6PD deficiency

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 22
4. Quinoline Methanols
• Mefloquine
• (2,8-bis(trifluoromethyl)quinolin-4-yl](piperidin-2-yl)methanol)
• Chemically related to quinine
• Synthesized with the intention of blocking the metabolism of Quinine with
the chemically stable –CF3 group.
• Fast acting Blood schizonticide
• Chiral molecule with two asymetric carbon centres, which means it has four
different stereoisomers.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 23
Quinoline Methanols….
• Mechanism of Action
• Same as chloroquine
• Pharmacokinetics
• Lipophilic in nature and presence of food enhances its absorption
• Metabolized to carboxymefloquine
• Extensive tissue binding with low clearance
• Side Effects
• Neuropsychiatric: seizures, suicidal tendencies
• CVS: arrhythmias
• Dermatologic: rash, pruritus
• GIT: nausea and vomitting, diarrhoea

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 24
5. Phenanthrene Methanols
• Halofantrine
• Unknown mechanism of action
• Used in chloroquine resistant malaria since 1980
• Erratic bioavailability and lethal cardiotoxicity have limited its use.
• Lumefantrine which is structurally related has been developed.

Halofantrine Lumefantrine
• Lumefantrine has a long half life (3-6 days) & is usually combined with short acting
Artemisinins (Artemether)
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 25
6. Sulphonamides & Sulphones
• Act by inhibiting the parasite’s
diydropteroate synthetase enzyme
• Not used alone but combined
with Pyrimethamine.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 26
7. Diaminopyrimidines
• E.g Pyrimethamine
• Mechanism of Action
• Interferes with the DNA synthesis by competitively inhibiting the
enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR).
• Effective against erythrocytic forms of all species.
• Used in combination with Sulphadoxine for sequential blockade

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 27
8. Biguanides
• Proguanil :
• Inhibitor of dihydrofolate reductase
• Prodrug converted to cycloguanil (active compound)
• Act slowly on erythrocytic stage of P. vivax & falciparum
• Not a drug for acute attack due to slow action
• Usually combined with Atovaquone

• Synthesis of Proguanil

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 28
9. Naphthoquinones
• Atovaquone (Synthetic napthoquinone)
• Rapidly acting blood schizonticide for Plasmodium falciparum &
other plasmodia
• Mechanism of Action
• Collapses mitochondrial membrane &
interferes ATP production by inhibition
of cytochrome c 0xidoreductase.

• Proguanil potentiates action of atovaquone and prevents


development of resistance (Malarone)
• Also used in P. Jiroveci & Toxoplasma gondii infection

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 29
10. Sesquiterpene Lactones
• Artemisinin is the active principle of the plant Artemisia annua
(sweet wormwood)
• Most potent and rapid acting blood schizonticide
• Sesquiterpine lactone derivative
• Complex tetracyclic structure &
contains a 1, 2, 4 trioxane &
a lactone ring with seven asymmetric
centers
• Limitations
• Short half life in vivo
• High recrudescence rate
• Poorly soluble in water & oil
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 30
SAR of Artemisinin Derivatives
• The endoperoxide bridge within the trioxane ring is
essential for activity; derivatives in which the
endoperoxide is modified e.g. deoxyartemisinin (1)
are inactive.

• The lactone ring B is not required for activity as demonstrated by the high
activity of deoxoartemsinin (5)
• Similarly, ring D is NOT required for activity as the tricyclic derivative (6) is
as active as ART - Artemisinin.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 31
SAR of Artemisinin derivatives…
• The methyl group on ring A is NOT required
for activity. D
• The non-peroxide ketal oxygen atom at the 4 A

position of the 1,2,4-trioxane ring is necessary C


B
for optimal activity as the 1,2- dioxane
derivatives (7) are less potent than the
parent 1,2,4- trioxanes.
• Artemisinin was the lead compound for the development of new
derivatives with improved pharmacokinetic properties.
• The lactone can be reduced to give
dihydroatermisinin (DHA) which
retains activity.
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 32
SAR of Artemisinin derivatives…
• Reduction of artemisinin to dihydroartemisinin introduces another
chiral center and gives rise to epimers (α and β) – both
stereoisomers being active.
• DHA can also be used to prepare semi-synthetic derivatives with
improved pharmacokinetic properties. E.g. Artesunate is the water
soluble hemisuccinate ester of Artemisinin while Artemether and
Arteether are oil soluble ether derivatives.

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 33
MoA of Artemisinin Derivatives
• Their action is linked to the presence of the endoperoxide bridge
• Endoperoxide bridge interacts with heme in parasite
• Heme iron cleaves this endoperoxide bridge
• There is generation of highly reactive free radicals which damage
parasite membrane by covalently binding to membrane proteins

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 34
Artemisinin Based Combination Therapy (ACT)
• Artemisinin compounds are short acting drugs
• Monotherapy needs to be extended beyond disappearance of
parasite to prevent recrudescence
• Prevented by combining Artemisinin compounds with other longer
acting drugs
• Indicated by WHO as first line treatment for acute uncomplicated
resistant falciparum malaria
• Advantages
• Rapid clinical & parasitological cure
• High cure rates and low recrudescence rates
• Helps to slow down the emergence of resistance *
• Good tolerability profile
07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 35
ACT Regimens in use
• Artemether – Lumefantrine
• Artesunate – Amodiaquine
• Artesunate – Sulfadoxine, pyrimethamine
• Artesunate - Mefloquine
• Dihydroartemisinin (DHA) – Piperaquine
• Artesunate- pyronaridine
• Arterolane – Piperaquine
• Artemisinin - Piperaquine
• Etc

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 36
11. Antibiotics
a. Tetracycline, Doxycycline.
• Slow but potent action on erythrocytic stage of all MP & Pre-
erythrocytic stage of falciparum
• Cannot be used in Children
• Mechanism of Action
• Inhibition of protein synthesis by binding to 30S ribosomal subunit

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 37
Antibiotics….
b. Clindamycin
• Semi-synthetic derivative of Lincomycin (produced by the
actinobacterium Streptomyces lincolnensis)
• Mechanism of Action
• Plasmodial protein synthesis inhibitor by binding
to the 50S ribosomal sub-unit.
• Derived from Lincomycin by using thionyl chloride
to replace the 7-hydroxy group with a chlorine atom
with inversion of chirality
• Usually combined with Quinine/CQ
• May be used as an alternative to the
tetracyclines in Children

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 38
12. Acridines
• Mepacrine
• Unclear mechanism of action
• DNA intercalation
• Interference with mitochondrial electron transport
• Obsolete due to severe side effects
• Toxic psychosis
• Mutagenic & carcinogenic

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 39
GOODLUCK!

07/31/2022 Kim J. B. 40

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