Initial studies on mechanism of action and cell death of active N-oxide-containing heterocycles in Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes in vitro
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2014Metadata
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Benítez, Diego
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Initial studies on mechanism of action and cell death of active N-oxide-containing heterocycles in Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes in vitro
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Abstract
Chagas disease, endemic in 21 countries across Latin America, kills more people in the region each year than any other
parasite-borne disease. Therapeutic options have problems ranging from toxicity, poor efficacy, drug resistance and high
cost. Thus, cheaper and less toxic treatments are necessary. From our in-house chemical library of agents against
Trypanosoma cruzi the most relevant N-oxide-containing heterocycles were selected for mode of action and type of death
studies. Also included in these studies were two active nitrofuranes. Epimastigotes of T. cruzi were used as the biological
model in this study. The metabolic profile was studied by 1HNMRin association with theMTTassay. Excreted catabolites
data, using 1H NMR spectroscopy, showed that most of the studied N-oxides were capable of decreasing both the release
of succinate and acetate shedding, the compounds therefore possibly acting on mitochondria. Only quinoxalines and the
nitrofurane Nf1 showed significant mitochondrial dehydrogenase inhibitions, but with different dose–time profiles. In the
particular case of quinoxaline Qx2 the glucose uptake study revealed that the integrity of some pathways into the glycosome
could be affected. Optic, fluorescence (TUNEL and propidium iodide) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were
employed for type of death studies. These studies were complemented with 1H NMR to visualize mobile lipids. At low
concentrations none of the selected compounds showed a positiveTUNEL assay. However, both quinoxalines, one furoxan
and one benzofuroxan showed a necrotic effect at high concentrations. Curiously, one furoxan, Fx1, one benzofuroxan,
Bfx1, and one nitrofurane, Nf1, caused a particular phenotype, with a big cytoplasmatic vacuole being observed while the
parasite was still alive. Studies of TEM and employing a protease inhibitor (3-methyladenine) suggested an autophagic
phenotype for Bfx1 and Nf1 and a ‘BigEye’ phenotype for Fx1.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
This work was supported by CSIC-Grupos 611
(Uruguay), PEDECIBA (Uruguay), FONDECYT
1090124 and 1130113 (to NG), FONDECYT 1110053
(to GC), CONICYT-PBCT Anillo ACT 112 ‘Research in
the Design of Pharmacological and Immunological
Strategies for the Control of Parasitic and Neoplasic
Aggressions’ (Chile), and RIDIMEDCHAG-CYTED.
D.B. is a fellow of ANII.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129580
ISSN: DOI: 10.1017/S003118201300200X
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Parasitology (2014), 141, 682–696.
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