Abstract

Chagas disease is a neglected tropical disease endemic to Latin America, though migratory movements have recently spread it to other regions. Here, we have applied a cascade virtual screening campaign combining ligand- and structure-based methods. In order to find novel inhibitors of putrescine uptake in Trypanosoma cruzi, an ensemble of linear ligand-based classifiers obtained by has been applied as initial screening filter, followed by docking into a homology model of the putrescine permease TcPAT12. 1,000 individual linear classifiers were inferred from a balanced dataset. Subsequently, different schemes were tested to combine the individual classifiers: MIN operator, average ranking, average score, average voting, with MIN operator leading to the best performance. The homology model was based on the arginine/agmatine antiporter (AdiC) from Escherichia coli as template. It showed 64% coverage of the entire query sequence and it was selected based on the normalized Discrete Optimized Protein Energy parameter and the GA341 score. The modeled structure had 96% in the allowed area of Ramachandran's plot, and none of the residues located in non-allowed regions were involved in the active site of the transporter. Positivity Predictive Value surfaces were applied to optimize the score thresholds to be used in the ligand-based virtual screening step: for that purpose Positivity Predictive Value was charted as a function of putative yields of active in the range 0.001–0.010 and the Se/Sp ratio. With a focus on drug repositioning opportunities, DrugBank and Sweetlead databases were subjected to screening. Among 8 hits, cinnarizine, a drug frequently prescribed for motion sickness and balance disorder, was tested against T. cruzi epimastigotes and amastigotes, confirming its trypanocidal effects and its inhibitory effects on putrescine uptake. Furthermore, clofazimine, an antibiotic with already proven trypanocidal effects, also displayed inhibitory effects on putrescine uptake. Two other hits, meclizine and butoconazole, also displayed trypanocidal effects (in the case of meclizine, against both epimastigotes and amastigotes), without inhibiting putrescine uptake.

Highlights

  • World Health Organization (WHO) describes neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) as a group of tropical diseases which mainly affect people living in poverty, lacking adequate sanitary conditions and in close contact with the infectious vectors (World Health Organization, 2015)

  • WHO estimates based on 2010 data indicate that more than 6 million people are infected with T. cruzi worldwide, mostly in Latin-American countries (World Health Organization, 2015)

  • Back in 2016, we reported the first in silico drug repurposing campaign to discover novel inhibitors of polyamine uptake in T. cruzi (Alberca et al, 2016); such study applied an ensemble of ligand-based models to screen DrugBank 4.0 and Sweetlead databases and resulted in the identification of three candidates that impaired putrescine transport: paroxetine, triclabendazole and sertaconazole

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Summary

Introduction

World Health Organization (WHO) describes neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) as a group of tropical diseases which mainly affect people living in poverty, lacking adequate sanitary conditions and in close contact with the infectious vectors (World Health Organization, 2015). One the most important NTDs—in numerical terms—is Chagas disease, a parasitic disease endemic to Latin-America, caused by the infection by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi. This parasite can be transmitted to humans and more than 150 domestic and wild mammals, making complete eradication of the parasite practically impossible. The main route of transmission of T. cruzi is through the feces of the insect vector, known as vinchuca, a bug of the subfamily Triatominae. WHO estimates based on 2010 data indicate that more than 6 million people are infected with T. cruzi worldwide, mostly in Latin-American countries (World Health Organization, 2015). Several reports suggest that the actual number of infected people could be quite higher, reaching 10 million people (Ventura-Garcia et al, 2013; Stanaway and Roth, 2015; Browne et al, 2017)

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