Abstract

Zolvix® is a recently introduced anthelmintic drench containing monepantel as the active ingredient. Monepantel is a positive allosteric modulator of DEG-3/DES-2 type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in several nematode species. The drug has been reported to produce hypercontraction of Caenorhabditis elegans and Haemonchus contortus somatic muscle. We investigated the effects of monepantel on nAChRs from Ascaris suum and Oesophagostomum dentatum heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Using two-electrode voltage-clamp electrophysiology, we studied the effects of monepantel on a nicotine preferring homomeric nAChR subtype from A. suum comprising of ACR-16; a pyrantel/tribendimidine preferring heteromeric subtype from O. dentatum comprising UNC-29, UNC-38 and UNC-63 subunits; and a levamisole preferring subtype (O. dentatum) comprising UNC-29, UNC-38, UNC-63 and ACR-8 subunits. For each subtype tested, monepantel applied in isolation produced no measurable currents thereby ruling out an agonist action. When monepantel was continuously applied, it reduced the amplitude of acetylcholine induced currents in a concentration-dependent manner. In all three subtypes, monepantel acted as a non-competitive antagonist on the expressed receptors. ACR-16 from A. suum was particularly sensitive to monepantel inhibition (IC50 values: 1.6 ± 3.1 nM and 0.2 ± 2.3 μM). We also investigated the effects of monepantel on muscle flaps isolated from adult A. suum. The drug did not significantly increase baseline tension when applied on its own. As with acetylcholine induced currents in the heterologously expressed receptors, contractions induced by acetylcholine were antagonized by monepantel. Further investigation revealed that the inhibition was a mixture of competitive and non-competitive antagonism. Our findings suggest that monepantel is active on multiple nAChR subtypes.

Highlights

  • Soil-Transmitted Helminth (STH) infections in humans and animals cause significant disease globally

  • To test the effects of monepantel, 100 μM acetylcholine was first applied for 10s as control, followed by a 2 min wash, perfusion with monepantel, after which acetylcholine applications were repeated in the presence of monepantel, Fig. 2B

  • The results we obtained for expressed nicotine (Asu-ACR-16), Oesophagustomum dentatum (Ode) pyrantel/tribendimidine (Ode-UNC-29:Ode-UNC-38:Ode-UNC-63) and Ode levamisole (Ode-UNC-29:Ode-UNC-38:Ode-UNC-63:Ode-ACR-8) subtype nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) which we describe in Sections 3.1, 3.2 and 3.3, encouraged us to investigate the in vivo effects of monepantel on Ascaris muscle

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Summary

Introduction

Soil-Transmitted Helminth (STH) infections in humans and animals cause significant disease (morbidity & mortality) globally. At least 1.2 billion people suffer from STH infections, with an estimated at-risk population of 4.5 billion (Bethony et al, 2006; Brooker et al, 2006; Lammie et al, 2006). Control of these infections is heavily reliant on the use of anthelmintics as there are no effective vaccines and sanitation is often sub-optimal (Kaminsky et al, 2013). Antinematodal (anthelmintic) drugs can be classified on the basis of similarity in chemical structure; benzimidazoles, imidazothiazoles, tetrahydopyrimidines, macrocyclic lactones, amino-acetonitrile derivatives, spiroindoles and cyclooctadepsipeptides. Increasing reports of resistance to the ‘older’ anthelmintic drugs has encouraged the development of newer drug classes: amino-acetonitrile derivatives, spiroindoles and cyclooctadepsipeptides

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