Molecules (Nov 2022)

Phenotypic Evaluation of Nucleoside Analogues against <i>Trypanosoma cruzi</i> Infection: In Vitro and In Vivo Approaches

  • Ludmila F. de A. Fiuza,
  • Denise G. J. Batista,
  • Roberson D. Girão,
  • Fabian Hulpia,
  • Paula Finamore-Araújo,
  • Mustafa M. Aldfer,
  • Ehab Kotb Elmahallawy,
  • Harry P. De Koning,
  • Otacílio Moreira,
  • Serge Van Calenbergh,
  • Maria de Nazaré C. Soeiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27228087
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 22
p. 8087

Abstract

Read online

Chagas disease, caused by Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi), is a serious public health problem. Current treatment is restricted to two drugs, benznidazole and nifurtimox, displaying serious efficacy and safety drawbacks. Nucleoside analogues represent a promising alternative as protozoans do not biosynthesize purines and rely on purine salvage from the hosts. Protozoan transporters often present different substrate specificities from mammalian transporters, justifying the exploration of nucleoside analogues as therapeutic agents. Previous reports identified nucleosides with potent trypanocidal activity; therefore, two 7-derivatized tubercidins (FH11706, FH10714) and a 3′-deoxytubercidin (FH8513) were assayed against T. cruzi. They were highly potent and selective, and the uptake of the tubercidin analogues appeared to be mediated by the nucleoside transporter TcrNT2. At 10 μM, the analogues reduced parasitemia >90% in 2D and 3D cardiac cultures. The washout assays showed that FH10714 sterilized the infected cultures. Given orally, the compounds did not induce noticeable mouse toxicity (50 mg/kg), suppressed the parasitemia of T. cruzi-infected Swiss mice (25 mg/kg, 5 days) and presented DNA amplification below the limit of detection. These findings justify further studies with longer treatment regimens, as well as evaluations in combination with nitro drugs, aiming to identify more effective and safer therapies for Chagas disease.

Keywords