Abstract

Human leishmaniasis covers a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations ranging from self-healing cutaneous leishmaniasis to severe and lethal visceral leishmaniasis caused among other species by Leishmania major or Leishmania donovani, respectively. Some drug candidates are in clinical trials to substitute current therapies, which are facing emerging drug-resistance accompanied with serious side effects. Here, two cinnamic acid bornyl ester derivatives (1 and 2) were assessed for their antileishmanial activity. Good selectivity and antileishmanial activity of bornyl 3-phenylpropanoate (2) in vitro prompted the antileishmanial assessment in vivo. For this purpose, BALB/c mice were infected with Leishmania major promastigotes and treated with three doses of 50 mg/kg/day of compound 2. The treatment prevented the characteristic swelling at the site of infection and correlated with reduced parasite burden. Transmitted light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy of Leishmania major promastigotes revealed that compounds 1 and 2 induce mitochondrial swelling. Subsequent studies on Leishmania major promastigotes showed the loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm) as a putative mode of action. As the cinnamic acid bornyl ester derivatives 1 and 2 had exhibited antileishmanial activity in vitro, and compound 2 in Leishmania major-infected BALB/c mice in vivo, they can be regarded as possible lead structures for the development of new antileishmanial therapeutic approaches.

Highlights

  • Human leishmaniasis is a vector-borne parasitic disease that is caused by more than 20 species of the protozoan genus Leishmania [1]

  • For the initial evaluation of the antileishmanial activity of compounds 1 and 2, a MTT reduction and an AlamarBlue assay with L. donovani and L. major parasites were employed, respectively

  • There is a huge clinical need, but no adequate treatment is available against leishmaniasis, mainly because the efficacy of the chemotherapy is limited by the continuous development of drug resistance to the first-line drugs [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Human leishmaniasis is a vector-borne parasitic disease that is caused by more than 20 species of the protozoan genus Leishmania [1]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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