International Journal for Parasitology: Drugs and Drug Resistance (Dec 2019)

Novel benzoxaborole, nitroimidazole and aminopyrazoles with activity against experimental cutaneous leishmaniasis

  • Katrien Van Bocxlaer,
  • Diana Caridha,
  • Chad Black,
  • Brian Vesely,
  • Susan Leed,
  • Richard J. Sciotti,
  • Gert-Jan Wijnant,
  • Vanessa Yardley,
  • Stéphanie Braillard,
  • Charles E. Mowbray,
  • Jean-Robert Ioset,
  • Simon L. Croft

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 129 – 138

Abstract

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Objectives: Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) has identified three chemical lead series, the nitroimidazoles, benzoxaboroles and aminopyrazoles, as innovative treatments for visceral leishmaniasis. The leads discovered using phenotypic screening, were optimised following disease- and compound-specific criteria. Several leads of each series were progressed and preclinical drug candidates have been nominated. Here we evaluate the efficacy of the lead compounds of each of these three chemical classes in in vitro and in vivo models of cutaneous leishmaniasis. Methods: The in vitro activity of fifty-five compounds was evaluated against the intracellular amastigotes of L. major, L. aethiopica, L. amazonensis, L. panamensis, L. mexicana and L. tropica. The drugs demonstrating potent activity (EC50 < 5 μM) against at least 4 of 6 species were subsequently evaluated in vivo in different L. major – BALB/c mouse models using a 5 or 10-day treatment with either the oral or topical formulations. Efficacy was expressed as lesion size (measured daily using callipers), parasite load (by quantitative PCR – DNA) and bioluminescence signal reduction relative to the untreated controls. Results: The selected drug compounds (3 nitroimidazoles, 1 benzoxaborole and 3 aminopyrazoles) showed consistent and potent activity across a range of Leishmania species that are known to cause CL with EC50 values ranging from 0.29 to 18.3 μM. In all cases, this potent in vitro antileishmanial activity translated into high levels of efficacy with a linear dose-response against murine CL. When administered at 50 mg/kg/day, DNDI-0690 (nitroimidazole), DNDI-1047 (aminopyrazole) and DNDI-6148 (benzoxaborole) all resulted in a significant lesion size reduction (no visible nodule) and an approximate 2-log-fold reduction of the parasite load as measured by qPCR compared to the untreated control. Conclusions: The lead compounds DNDI-0690, DNDI-1047 and DNDI-6148 showed excellent activity across a range of Leishmania species in vitro and against L. major in mice. These compounds offer novel potential drugs for the treatment of CL. Keywords: Cutaneous leishmaniasis, Drug discovery, Aminopyrazole, Benzoxaborole, Nitroimidazole