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Featured researches published by Jiri Gut.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Antiplasmodial and cytotoxicity evaluation of 3-functionalized 2-azetidinone derivatives

Pardeep Singh; Shaveta Sachdeva; Raghu Raj; Vipan Kumar; Mohinder P. Mahajan; Shereen Nasser; Livia Vivas; Jiri Gut; Phillip Rosenthal; Tzu-Shean Feng; Kelly Chibale

3-Azido-, 3-amino- and 3-(1,2,3-triazol-1-yl)-β-lactams were synthesized and evaluated for their antiplasmodial activity against four strains of Plasmodium falciparum and KB cells for their cytotoxicity profiles. The presence of a cyclohexyl substituent at N-1 and a phenyl group on the triazole ring markedly improved the activity profiles of triazole-tethered β-lactam exhibiting IC(50) values of 1.13, 1.21 and 1.00 μM against 3D7, K1 and W2 strains respectively.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

Critical role of amino acid 23 in mediating activity and specificity of vinckepain-2, a papain-family cysteine protease of rodent malaria parasites

Ajay Singh; Bhaskar R. Shenai; Youngchool Choe; Jiri Gut; Puran Singh Sijwali; Charles S. Craik; Philip J. Rosenthal

Cysteine proteases of Plasmodium falciparum, known as falcipains, have been identified as haemoglobinases and potential drug targets. As anti-malarial drug discovery requires the analysis of non-primate malaria, genes encoding related cysteine proteases of the rodent malaria parasites P. vinckei (vinckepain-2) and P. berghei (berghepain-2) were characterized. These genes encoded fairly typical papain-family proteases, but they contained an unusual substitution of Gly23 with Ala (papain numbering system). Vinckepain-2 was expressed in Escherichia coli, solubilized, refolded and autoprocessed to an active enzyme. The protease shared important features with the falcipains, including an acidic pH optimum, preference for reducing conditions, optimal cleavage of peptide substrates with P2 Leu and ready hydrolysis of haemoglobin. However, key differences between the plasmodial proteases were identified. In particular, vinckepain-2 showed very different kinetics against many substrates and an unusual preference for peptide substrates with P1 Gly. Replacement of Ala23 with Gly remarkably altered vinckepain-2, including loss of the P1 Gly substrate preference, markedly increased catalytic activity ( k cat/ K m increased approx. 100-fold) and more rapid autohydrolysis. The present study identifies key animal-model parasite targets. It indicates that drug discovery studies must take into account important differences between plasmodial proteases and sheds light on the critical role of amino acid 23 in catalysis by papain-family proteases.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Novel cinnamic acid/4-aminoquinoline conjugates bearing non-proteinogenic amino acids: Towards the development of potential dual action antimalarials

Bianca Pérez; Cátia Teixeira; Marta Figueiras; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; José R. B. Gomes; Paula Gomes

A series of cinnamic acid/4-aminoquinoline conjugates conceived to link, through a proper retro-enantio dipeptide, a heterocyclic core known to prevent hemozoin formation, to a trans-cinnamic acid motif capable of inhibiting enzyme catalytic Cys residues, were synthesized as potential dual-action antimalarials. The effect of amino acid configuration and the absence of the dipeptide spacer were also assessed. The replacement of the D-amino acids by their natural L counterparts led to a decrease in both anti-plasmodial and falcipain-inhibitory activity, suggesting that the former are preferable. Molecules with such spacer were active against blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum, in vitro, and hemozoin formation, implying that the dipeptide has a key role in mediating these two activities. In turn, compounds without spacer were better falcipain-2 inhibitors, likely because these compounds are smaller and have their vinyl bonds in closer vicinity to the catalytic Cys, as suggested by molecular modeling calculations. These novel conjugates constitute promising leads for the development of new antiplasmodials targeted at blood-stage malaria parasites.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

The design, synthesis, in silico ADME profiling, antiplasmodial and antimycobacterial evaluation of new arylamino quinoline derivatives.

Matshawandile Tukulula; Susan Little; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; Baojie Wan; Scott G. Franzblau; Kelly Chibale

A series of new arylamino quinoline derivatives was designed based on the quinine and mefloquine scaffolds and evaluated in vitro for antiplasmodial and antimycobacterial activities. A number of these compounds exhibited significant activity against the drug-sensitive 3D7 and drug-resistant K1 strains of Plasmodium falciparum. Furthermore, two compounds, 4.12b and 4.12d, also showed 94 and 98% growth inhibitory activity against non-replicating and replicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains, respectively.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

In vitro efficiency of 9-(N-cinnamoylbutyl)aminoacridines against blood- and liver-stage malaria parasites

Bianca Pérez; Cátia Teixeira; Ana Gomes; Inês S. Albuquerque; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; Miguel Prudêncio; Paula Gomes

Novel 9-aminoacridine derivatives were synthesized by linking the heteroaromatic core to different cinnamic acids through an aminobutyl chain. The test compounds demonstrated mid-nanomolar in vitro activity against erythrocytic stages of the chloroquine-resistant W2 strain of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Two of the most active derivatives also showed in vitro activity against liver-stage Plasmodium berghei, with activity greater than that of the reference liver-stage antimalarial primaquine. The compounds were not toxic to human hepatoma cells at concentrations up to 5 μM. Hence, 9-(N-cinnamoylbutyl)aminoacridines are a new class of leads for prevention and treatment of malaria.


MedChemComm | 2010

PRIMACENES: novel non-cytotoxic primaquine-ferrocene conjugates with anti-Pneumocystis carinii activity

Joana Matos; Nuno Vale; Margaret S. Collins; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; Melanie T. Cushion; Rui Moreira; Paula Gomes

Primacenes, novel ferrocene–primaquine conjugates, were synthesized and screened for their antimalarial and anti-pneumocystis activity. Primacenes obtained by coupling primaquine amino acid derivatives to ferrocenoic acid were significantly active against Pneumocystis carinii and devoid of cytotoxicity, thus being more selective than the parent drug.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis of gallinamide A analogues as potent falcipain inhibitors and antimalarials.

Trent Conroy; Jin T. Guo; Nabiha Elias; Katie M. Cergol; Jiri Gut; Jennifer Legac; Lubna Khatoon; Yang Liu; Sheena McGowan; Philip J. Rosenthal; Nicholas H. Hunt; Richard J. Payne

Analogues of the natural product gallinamide A were prepared to elucidate novel inhibitors of the falcipain cysteine proteases. Analogues exhibited potent inhibition of falcipain-2 (FP-2) and falcipain-3 (FP-3) and of the development of Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. Several compounds were equipotent to chloroquine as inhibitors of the 3D7 strain of P. falciparum and maintained potent activity against the chloroquine-resistant Dd2 parasite. These compounds serve as promising leads for the development of novel antimalarial agents.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Tetrazole-based deoxyamodiaquines: Synthesis, ADME/PK profiling and pharmacological evaluation as potential antimalarial agents

Matshawandile Tukulula; Mathew Njoroge; Grace Mugumbate; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal; Samuel Barteau; Judith Streckfuss; Olivier Heudi; Jacques Kameni-Tcheudji; Kelly Chibale

A series of new deoxyamodiaquine-based compounds was synthesized via the modified TMSN3-Ugi multi-component reaction and evaluated in vitro for antiplasmodial activity. The most potent compounds, 6b, 6c and 6j, showed IC50 values in the range of 6-77nM against chloroquine-resistant K1- and W2-strains of Plasmodium falciparum. In vitro ADME characterization of frontrunner compounds 6b and 6c indicates that these two compounds are rapidly metabolized and have a high clearance rate in human and rat liver microsomes. This result correlated well with an in vivo pharmacokinetics study, which showed low bioavailability of 6c in rats. Tentative metabolite identification was determined by LC-MS and suggested metabolic lability of groups attached to the tertiary nitrogen. Preliminary studies on 6b and 6c suggested strong inhibitory activity against the major CYP450 enzymes. In silico docking studies were used to rationalize strong inhibition of CYP3A4 by 6c. Full characterization and biological evaluation of the metabolites is currently underway in our laboratories.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Trioxolane-Mediated Delivery of Mefloquine Limits Brain Exposure in a Mouse Model of Malaria

Erica M. W. Lauterwasser; Shaun D. Fontaine; Hao Li; Jiri Gut; Kasiram Katneni; Susan A. Charman; Philip J. Rosenthal; Matthew Bogyo; Adam R. Renslo

Peroxidic antimalarial agents including the sequiterpene artemisinins and the synthetic 1,2,4-trioxolanes function via initial intraparasitic reduction of an endoperoxide bond. By chemically coupling this reduction to release of a tethered drug species it is possible to confer two distinct pharmacological effects in a parasite-selective fashion, both in vitro and in vivo. Here we demonstrate the trioxolane-mediated delivery of the antimalarial agent mefloquine in a mouse malaria model. Selective partitioning of the trioxolane-mefloquine conjugate in parasitized erythrocytes, combined with effective exclusion of the conjugate from brain significantly reduced brain exposure as compared to mice directly administered mefloquine. These studies suggest the potential of trioxolane-mediated drug delivery to mitigate off-target effects of existing drugs, including the adverse neuropsychiatric effects of mefloquine use in therapeutic and chemoprophylactic settings.


Malaria Journal | 2010

Falcipain 2 inhibitors and antiplasmodial compounds from a bio-guided fractionation of the fruits of Sorindeia juglandifolia A. Rich. (Anacardiaceae) growing in Cameroon

Fabrice Fekam Boyom; Eugénie K Madiesse; Jean J Bankeu; Valere P Tsouh; Bruno Ndjakou Lenta; Wilfred F. Mbacham; Etienne Tsamo; Paul Ha Zollo; Jiri Gut; Philip J. Rosenthal

Materials and methods Fresh fruits were collected by an ethnobotanist in Yaounde area in May 2009. The plant was dried at Room Temperature during 7 days, powdered and extracted using organic solvents. The extract was fractionated by flash chromatography over silica gel (70-230 mesh, Merck, 7 x 42 cm), eluting with gradients of hexane-ethyl acetate mixtures, and resulted in 35 fractions, which were pooled on the basis of thin layer chromatography patterns. Resulting fractions were tested in vitro against the Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine-resistant strain W2, and the recombinant cysteine protease Falcipain 2 (F2) [1]. Two fractions showed the best potency and were selected for phytochemical investigation guided by biological activity.

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James Leech

University of California

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Kelly Chibale

South African Medical Research Council

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Phillip Rosenthal

San Francisco General Hospital

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Miguel Prudêncio

Instituto de Medicina Molecular

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