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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Delves is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Delves.


PLOS Medicine | 2012

The Activities of Current Antimalarial Drugs on the Life Cycle Stages of Plasmodium: A Comparative Study with Human and Rodent Parasites

Michael J. Delves; David Plouffe; Christian Scheurer; Stephan Meister; Sergio Wittlin; Elizabeth A. Winzeler; Robert E. Sinden; Didier Leroy

Michael Delves and colleagues compare the activity of 50 current and experimental antimalarials against liver, sexual blood, and mosquito stages of selected human and nonhuman parasite species, including Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium berghei, and Plasmodium yoelii.


Science Translational Medicine | 2013

Quinolone-3-Diarylethers: A New Class of Antimalarial Drug

Aaron Nilsen; Alexis N. LaCrue; Karen L. White; Isaac P. Forquer; R. Matthew Cross; Jutta Marfurt; Michael W. Mather; Michael J. Delves; David M. Shackleford; Fabián E. Sáenz; Joanne M. Morrisey; Jessica Steuten; Tina Mutka; Yuexin Li; Grennady Wirjanata; Eileen Ryan; Sandra Duffy; Jane Xu Kelly; Boni F. Sebayang; Anne-Marie Zeeman; Rintis Noviyanti; Robert E. Sinden; Clemens H. M. Kocken; Ric N. Price; Vicky M. Avery; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; María Belén Jiménez-Díaz; Santiago Ferrer; Esperanza Herreros; Laura Sanz

ELQ-300, an investigational drug for treating and preventing malaria, shows potent transmission-blocking activity in rodent models of malaria. Taking the Bite Out of Malaria Malaria is spread from person to person by mosquitoes that inject 8 to 10 sporozoite forms of the parasite in a single bite. The sporozoites reproduce in the liver to produce 10,000 to 30,000 merozoites before the liver schizont ruptures and parasites flood into the bloodstream where the absolute parasite burden may increase to a thousand billion (1012) circulating parasites. Some of these parasites develop into gametocytes that may be ingested by another mosquito where they progress through ookinete, oocyst, and sporozoite stages to complete the cycle. Like quinine, most antimalarial drugs in use today target only the symptomatic blood stage. The efficacy of these drugs has been compromised by resistance, and so there is a pressing need for new drugs that target multiple stages of the parasite life cycle for use in malaria treatment and prevention. Clearly, it is advantageous to strike at the liver stage where parasite numbers are low, to diminish the likelihood of selecting for a resistant mutant and before the infection has a chance to weaken the defenses of the human host. In a new study, Nilsen and colleagues describe ELQ-300, a 4(1H)-quinolone-3-diarylether, which targets the liver and blood stages, including the forms that are crucial to disease transmission (gametocytes, zygotes, and ookinetes). In mouse models of malaria, a single oral dose of 0.03 mg/kg prevented sporozoite-induced infections, whereas four daily doses of 1 mg/kg achieved complete cures of patent infections. ELQ-300 is a preclinical candidate that may be coformulated with other antimalarials to prevent and treat malaria, with the potential to aid in eradication of the disease. The goal for developing new antimalarial drugs is to find a molecule that can target multiple stages of the parasite’s life cycle, thus impacting prevention, treatment, and transmission of the disease. The 4(1H)-quinolone-3-diarylethers are selective potent inhibitors of the parasite’s mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex. These compounds are highly active against the human malaria parasites Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax. They target both the liver and blood stages of the parasite as well as the forms that are crucial for disease transmission, that is, the gametocytes, the zygote, the ookinete, and the oocyst. Selected as a preclinical candidate, ELQ-300 has good oral bioavailability at efficacious doses in mice, is metabolically stable, and is highly active in blocking transmission in rodent models of malaria. Given its predicted low dose in patients and its predicted long half-life, ELQ-300 has potential as a new drug for the treatment, prevention, and, ultimately, eradication of human malaria.


Nature | 2015

A novel multiple-stage antimalarial agent that inhibits protein synthesis

Beatriz Baragaña; Irene Hallyburton; Marcus C. S. Lee; Neil R. Norcross; Raffaella Grimaldi; Thomas D. Otto; William R. Proto; Andrew M. Blagborough; Stephan Meister; Grennady Wirjanata; Andrea Ruecker; Leanna M. Upton; Tara S. Abraham; Mariana Justino de Almeida; Anupam Pradhan; Achim Porzelle; María Santos Martínez; Judith M. Bolscher; Andrew Woodland; Suzanne Norval; Fabio Zuccotto; John Thomas; Frederick R. C. Simeons; Laste Stojanovski; Maria Osuna-Cabello; Patrick M. Brock; Thomas S. Churcher; Katarzyna A. Sala; Sara E. Zakutansky; María Belén Jiménez-Díaz

There is an urgent need for new drugs to treat malaria, with broad therapeutic potential and novel modes of action, to widen the scope of treatment and to overcome emerging drug resistance. Here we describe the discovery of DDD107498, a compound with a potent and novel spectrum of antimalarial activity against multiple life-cycle stages of the Plasmodium parasite, with good pharmacokinetic properties and an acceptable safety profile. DDD107498 demonstrates potential to address a variety of clinical needs, including single-dose treatment, transmission blocking and chemoprotection. DDD107498 was developed from a screening programme against blood-stage malaria parasites; its molecular target has been identified as translation elongation factor 2 (eEF2), which is responsible for the GTP-dependent translocation of the ribosome along messenger RNA, and is essential for protein synthesis. This discovery of eEF2 as a viable antimalarial drug target opens up new possibilities for drug discovery.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

A long-duration dihydroorotate dehydrogenase inhibitor (DSM265) for prevention and treatment of malaria

Margaret A. Phillips; Julie Lotharius; Kennan Marsh; John White; Anthony Dayan; Karen L. White; Jacqueline W. Njoroge; Farah El Mazouni; Yanbin Lao; Sreekanth Kokkonda; Diana R. Tomchick; Xiaoyi Deng; Trevor Laird; Sangeeta N. Bhatia; Sandra March; Caroline L. Ng; David A. Fidock; Sergio Wittlin; Maria J. Lafuente-Monasterio; Francisco Javier Gamo–Benito; Laura Maria Sanz Alonso; María Santos Martínez; María Belén Jiménez-Díaz; Santiago Ferrer Bazaga; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; John N. Haselden; James Louttit; Yi Cui; Arun Sridhar; Anna Marie Zeeman

The antimalarial drug DSM265 displays activity against blood and liver stages of Plasmodium falciparum and has a long predicted half-life in humans. Long-acting new treatment for drug-resistant malaria Malaria kills 0.6 million people annually, yet current malaria drugs are no longer fully effective because the parasite that causes malaria is becoming resistant to these agents. Phillips et al. have identified a new drug that kills both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant malaria parasites by targeting the ability of the parasite to synthesize the nucleotide precursors required for synthesis of DNA and RNA. This drug kills parasites in both the blood and liver and is sufficiently long-acting that it is expected to cure malaria after a single dose or to be effective if dosed weekly for chemoprevention. Malaria is one of the most significant causes of childhood mortality, but disease control efforts are threatened by resistance of the Plasmodium parasite to current therapies. Continued progress in combating malaria requires development of new, easy to administer drug combinations with broad-ranging activity against all manifestations of the disease. DSM265, a triazolopyrimidine-based inhibitor of the pyrimidine biosynthetic enzyme dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH), is the first DHODH inhibitor to reach clinical development for treatment of malaria. We describe studies profiling the biological activity, pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties, and safety of DSM265, which supported its advancement to human trials. DSM265 is highly selective toward DHODH of the malaria parasite Plasmodium, efficacious against both blood and liver stages of P. falciparum, and active against drug-resistant parasite isolates. Favorable pharmacokinetic properties of DSM265 are predicted to provide therapeutic concentrations for more than 8 days after a single oral dose in the range of 200 to 400 mg. DSM265 was well tolerated in repeat-dose and cardiovascular safety studies in mice and dogs, was not mutagenic, and was inactive against panels of human enzymes/receptors. The excellent safety profile, blood- and liver-stage activity, and predicted long half-life in humans position DSM265 as a new potential drug combination partner for either single-dose treatment or once-weekly chemoprevention. DSM265 has advantages over current treatment options that are dosed daily or are inactive against the parasite liver stage.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Generation of quinolone antimalarials targeting the Plasmodium falciparum mitochondrial respiratory chain for the treatment and prophylaxis of malaria

Giancarlo A. Biagini; Nicholas S. Fisher; Alison E. Shone; Murad A. Mubaraki; Abhishek Srivastava; Alasdair Hill; Thomas Antoine; Ashley J. Warman; Jill Davies; Chandrakala Pidathala; Richard Amewu; Suet C. Leung; Raman Sharma; Peter Gibbons; David W Hong; Bénédicte Pacorel; Alexandre S. Lawrenson; Sitthivut Charoensutthivarakul; Lee Taylor; Olivier Berger; Alison Mbekeani; Paul A. Stocks; Gemma L. Nixon; James Chadwick; Janet Hemingway; Michael J. Delves; Robert E. Sinden; Anne-Marie Zeeman; Clemens H. M. Kocken; Neil G. Berry

There is an urgent need for new antimalarial drugs with novel mechanisms of action to deliver effective control and eradication programs. Parasite resistance to all existing antimalarial classes, including the artemisinins, has been reported during their clinical use. A failure to generate new antimalarials with novel mechanisms of action that circumvent the current resistance challenges will contribute to a resurgence in the disease which would represent a global health emergency. Here we present a unique generation of quinolone lead antimalarials with a dual mechanism of action against two respiratory enzymes, NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Plasmodium falciparum NDH2) and cytochrome bc1. Inhibitor specificity for the two enzymes can be controlled subtly by manipulation of the privileged quinolone core at the 2 or 3 position. Inhibitors display potent (nanomolar) activity against both parasite enzymes and against multidrug-resistant P. falciparum parasites as evidenced by rapid and selective depolarization of the parasite mitochondrial membrane potential, leading to a disruption of pyrimidine metabolism and parasite death. Several analogs also display activity against liver-stage parasites (Plasmodium cynomolgi) as well as transmission-blocking properties. Lead optimized molecules also display potent oral antimalarial activity in the Plasmodium berghei mouse malaria model associated with favorable pharmacokinetic features that are aligned with a single-dose treatment. The ease and low cost of synthesis of these inhibitors fulfill the target product profile for the generation of a potent, safe, and inexpensive drug with the potential for eventual clinical deployment in the control and eradication of falciparum malaria.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

Male and Female Plasmodium falciparum Mature Gametocytes Show Different Responses to Antimalarial Drugs

Michael J. Delves; Andrea Ruecker; Ursula Straschil; Joël Lelièvre; Sara R. Marques; María José López-Barragán; Esperanza Herreros; Robert E. Sinden

ABSTRACT It is the mature gametocytes of Plasmodium that are solely responsible for parasite transmission from the mammalian host to the mosquito. They are therefore a logical target for transmission-blocking antimalarial interventions, which aim to break the cycle of reinfection and reduce the prevalence of malaria cases. Gametocytes, however, are not a homogeneous cell population. They are sexually dimorphic, and both males and females are required for parasite transmission. Using two bioassays, we explored the effects of 20 antimalarials on the functional viability of both male and female mature gametocytes of Plasmodium falciparum. We show that mature male gametocytes (as reported by their ability to produce male gametes, i.e., to exflagellate) are sensitive to antifolates, some endoperoxides, methylene blue, and thiostrepton, with submicromolar 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s), whereas female gametocytes (as reported by their ability to activate and form gametes expressing the marker Pfs25) are much less sensitive to antimalarial intervention, with only methylene blue and thiostrepton showing any significant activity. These findings show firstly that the antimalarial responses of male and female gametocytes differ and secondly that the mature male gametocyte should be considered a more vulnerable target than the female gametocyte for transmission-blocking drugs. Given the female-biased sex ratio of Plasmodium falciparum (∼3 to 5 females:1 male), current gametocyte assays without a sex-specific readout are unlikely to identify male-targeted compounds and prioritize them for further development. Both assays reported here are being scaled up to at least medium throughput and will permit identification of key transmission-blocking molecules that have been overlooked by other screening campaigns.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Spatial localisation of actin filaments across developmental stages of the malaria parasite.

Fiona Angrisano; David T. Riglar; Angelika Sturm; Jc Volz; Michael J. Delves; Elizabeth S. Zuccala; Lynne Turnbull; Chaitali Dekiwadia; Maya A. Olshina; Danushka S. Marapana; W. Wei-Lynn Wong; Mollard; Ch Bradin; Christopher J. Tonkin; Peter Gunning; Stuart A. Ralph; Cynthia B. Whitchurch; Re Sinden; Alan F. Cowman; Geoffrey I. McFadden; Jake Baum

Actin dynamics have been implicated in a variety of developmental processes during the malaria parasite lifecycle. Parasite motility, in particular, is thought to critically depend on an actomyosin motor located in the outer pellicle of the parasite cell. Efforts to understand the diverse roles actin plays have, however, been hampered by an inability to detect microfilaments under native conditions. To visualise the spatial dynamics of actin we generated a parasite-specific actin antibody that shows preferential recognition of filamentous actin and applied this tool to different lifecycle stages (merozoites, sporozoites and ookinetes) of the human and mouse malaria parasite species Plasmodium falciparum and P. berghei along with tachyzoites from the related apicomplexan parasite Toxoplasma gondii. Actin filament distribution was found associated with three core compartments: the nuclear periphery, pellicular membranes of motile or invasive parasite forms and in a ring-like distribution at the tight junction during merozoite invasion of erythrocytes in both human and mouse malaria parasites. Localisation at the nuclear periphery is consistent with an emerging role of actin in facilitating parasite gene regulation. During invasion, we show that the actin ring at the parasite-host cell tight junction is dependent on dynamic filament turnover. Super-resolution imaging places this ring posterior to, and not concentric with, the junction marker rhoptry neck protein 4. This implies motor force relies on the engagement of dynamic microfilaments at zones of traction, though not necessarily directly through receptor-ligand interactions at sites of adhesion during invasion. Combined, these observations extend current understanding of the diverse roles actin plays in malaria parasite development and apicomplexan cell motility, in particular refining understanding on the linkage of the internal parasite gliding motor with the extra-cellular milieu.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014

A Male and Female Gametocyte Functional Viability Assay To Identify Biologically Relevant Malaria Transmission-Blocking Drugs

Andrea Ruecker; Derrick K. Mathias; Ursula Straschil; Thomas S. Churcher; Rhoel R. Dinglasan; Didier Leroy; Robert E. Sinden; Michael J. Delves

ABSTRACT Malaria elimination will require interventions that prevent parasite transmission from the human host to the mosquito. Experimentally, this is usually determined by the expensive and laborious Plasmodium falciparum standard membrane feeding assay (PfSMFA), which has limited utility for high-throughput drug screening. In response, we developed the P. falciparum dual gamete formation assay (PfDGFA), which faithfully simulates the initial stages of the PfSMFA in vitro. It utilizes a dual readout that individually and simultaneously reports on the functional viability of male and female mature stage V gametocytes. To validate, we screen the Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) Malaria Box library with the PfDGFA. Unique to this assay, we find compounds that target male gametocytes only and also compounds with reversible and irreversible activity. Most importantly, we show that compound activity in the PfDGFA accurately predicts activity in PfSMFAs, which validates and supports its adoption into the transmission-stage screening pipeline.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2012

A high-throughput assay for the identification of malarial transmission-blocking drugs and vaccines.

Michael J. Delves; Chandra Ramakrishnan; Andrew M. Blagborough; Didier Leroy; Timothy N. C. Wells; Robert E. Sinden

Following the cessation of the global malaria eradication initiative in the 1970s, the prime objective of malarial intervention has been to reduce morbidity and mortality. This motivated the development of high throughput assays to determine the impact of interventions on asexual bloodstage parasites. In response to the new eradication agenda, interrupting parasite transmission from the human to the mosquito has been recognised as an important and additional target for intervention. Current assays for Plasmodium mosquito stage development are very low throughput and resource intensive, and are therefore inappropriate for high throughput screening. Using an ookinete-specific GFP reporter strain of the rodent parasite Plasmodium berghei, it has been possible to develop and validate a high biological complexity, high throughput bioassay that can rapidly, reproducibly and accurately evaluate the effect of transmission-blocking drugs or vaccines on the ability of host-derived gametocytes to undergo the essential onward steps of gamete formation, fertilisation and ookinete maturation. This assay may greatly accelerate the development of malaria transmission-blocking interventions.


Nature Communications | 2014

Pyrazoleamide compounds are potent antimalarials that target Na+ homeostasis in intraerythrocytic Plasmodium falciparum

Akhil B. Vaidya; Joanne M. Morrisey; Zhongsheng Zhang; Sudipta Das; Thomas M. Daly; Thomas D. Otto; Natalie J. Spillman; Matthew Wyvratt; Peter Siegl; Jutta Marfurt; Grennady Wirjanata; Boni F. Sebayang; Ric N. Price; Arnab K. Chatterjee; Advait Nagle; Marcin Stasiak; Susan A. Charman; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; Santiago Ferrer; María Belén Jiménez-Díaz; María Santos Martínez; Francisco Javier Gamo; Vicky M. Avery; Andrea Ruecker; Michael J. Delves; Kiaran Kirk; Matthew Berriman; Jeremy N. Burrows; Erkang Fan; Lawrence W. Bergman

The quest for new antimalarial drugs, especially those with novel modes of action, is essential in the face of emerging drug-resistant parasites. Here we describe a new chemical class of molecules, pyrazoleamides, with potent activity against human malaria parasites and showing remarkably rapid parasite clearance in an in vivo model. Investigations involving pyrazoleamide-resistant parasites, whole-genome sequencing and gene transfers reveal that mutations in two proteins, a calcium-dependent protein kinase (PfCDPK5) and a P-type cation-ATPase (PfATP4), are necessary to impart full resistance to these compounds. A pyrazoleamide compound causes a rapid disruption of Na+ regulation in blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum parasites. Similar effect on Na+ homeostasis was recently reported for spiroindolones, which are antimalarials of a chemical class quite distinct from pyrazoleamides. Our results reveal that disruption of Na+ homeostasis in malaria parasites is a promising mode of antimalarial action mediated by at least two distinct chemical classes.

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Jake Baum

Imperial College London

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