Abstract

Parasitic worms cause very significant diseases in animals and humans worldwide, and their control is critical to enhance health, well-being and productivity. Due to widespread drug resistance in many parasitic worms of animals globally, there is a major, continuing demand for the discovery and development of anthelmintic drugs for use to control these worms. Here, we established a practical, cost-effective and semi-automated high throughput screening (HTS) assay, which relies on the measurement of motility of larvae of the barber’s pole worm (Haemonchus contortus) using infrared light-interference. Using this assay, we screened 80,500 small molecules and achieved a hit rate of 0.05%. We identified three small molecules that reproducibly inhibited larval motility and/or development (IC50 values of ~4 to 41 µM). Future work will critically assess the potential of selected hits as candidates for subsequent optimisation or repurposing against parasitic nematodes. This HTS assay has a major advantage over most previous assays in that it achieves a ≥ 10-times higher throughput (i.e., 10,000 compounds per week), and is thus suited to the screening of libraries of tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of compounds for subsequent hit-to-lead optimisation or effective repurposing and development. The current assay should be adaptable to many socioeconomically important parasitic nematodes, including those that cause neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). This aspect is of relevance, given the goals of the World Health Organization (WHO) Roadmap for NTDs 2021–2030, to develop more effective drugs and drug combinations to improve patient outcomes and circumvent the ineffectiveness of some current anthelmintic drugs and possible drug resistance.

Highlights

  • We established here a practical, cost- and time-effective semi-automated high throughput screening (HTS) assay, which relies on the measurement of motility of H. contortus larvae using infrared light beam-interference as well as the subsequent assessment of developmental inhibition and phenotypic alterations

  • Experiments were conducted to establish the optimum density of xL3s in wells of plates for HTS

  • For H. contortus xL3s, we identified that different measurement modes had a profound effect on the measurement of motility (‘activity counts’)

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Summary

Introduction

Substantial socioeconomic benefits are gained from the chemotherapeutic control of parasitic worms of animals and humans. Numerous challenges need to be overcome in a continued effort to discover new compounds with enhanced performance (safety, efficacy and convenience), given the ineffectiveness of some treatments and the widespread drug resistance in many parasites of many host species [1,2]. Substantial efforts have gone into vaccine discovery and development, there is currently no licensed, safe and effective vaccine against a human helminthiasis, and only a very small. There is a clear need for continued efforts to discover and develop new and effective anthelmintic compounds to achieve effective control

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