Abstract

Nematode parasitosis causes significant mortality and morbidity in humans and considerable losses in livestock and domestic animals. The acquisition of resistance to current anthelmintic drugs has prompted the search for new compounds for which the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has emerged as a valuable platform. We have previously synthetized a small library of oxygenated tricyclic compounds and determined that dibenzo[b,e]oxepin-11(6H)-one (doxepinone) inhibits C. elegans motility. Because doxepinone shows potential anthelmintic activity, we explored its behavioral effects and deciphered its target site and mechanism of action on C. elegans. Doxepinone reduces swimming rate, induces paralysis, and decreases the rate of pharyngeal pumping required for feeding, indicating a marked anthelmintic activity. To identify the main drug targets, we performed an in vivo screening of selected strains carrying mutations in Cys-loop receptors involved in worm locomotion for determining resistance to doxepinone effects. A mutant strain that lacks subunit genes of the invertebrate glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl), which are targets of the widely used antiparasitic ivermectin (IVM), is resistant to doxepinone effects. To unravel the molecular mechanism, we measured whole-cell currents from GluClα1/β receptors expressed in mammalian cells. Glutamate elicits macroscopic currents whereas no responses are elicited by doxepinone, indicating that it is not an agonist of GluCls. Preincubation of the cell with doxepinone produces a statistically significant decrease of the decay time constant and net charge of glutamate-elicited currents, indicating that it inhibits GluCls, which contrasts to IVM molecular actions. Thus, we identify doxepinone as an attractive scaffold with promising anthelmintic activity and propose the inhibition of GluCls as a potential anthelmintic mechanism of action.

Highlights

  • Nematode parasitosis is an important cause of mortality and morbidity in humans and affects livestock and domestic animals

  • To determine receptor targets involved in the rapid effects of doxepinone on C. elegans swimming rate, we explored the effects on selected mutant strains lacking Cys-loop receptors involved in worm locomotion, which are targets of anthelmintic drugs

  • We here identified dibenzo[b,e]oxepin-11(6H)-one as a novel anthelmintic compound acting through glutamate-gated chloride channel (GluCl) by a different mechanism to that of the widely used anthelmintic drug, IVM, and proposed that GluCl inhibition may be further explored as a mechanism of action of anthelmintic drugs

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Nematode parasitosis is an important cause of mortality and morbidity in humans and affects livestock and domestic animals. Cys-loop receptors are major targets of anthelmintic drugs in parasites and C. elegans (Holden-Dye and Walker, 2006; Beech and Neveu, 2015). They belong to the family of pentameric ligand-gated ion channels and play key roles throughout the nervous system in vertebrates and invertebrates. Invertebrates contain a larger variety of Cys-loop receptors, including a unique type of glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl) (Jones and Sattelle, 2008). Because doxepinone is a privileged structure with potential anthelmintic activity, we here explored in detail its behavioral effects and deciphered its target site and mechanism of action on C. elegans as a parasite model. We propose doxepinone as an attractive scaffold with potential antiparasitic activity mediated, at least in part, through GluCls

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