Abstract

Visceral leishmaniasis (VL), caused by the protozoan parasites Leishmania donovani and L. infantum, is responsible for ∼30 000 deaths annually. Available treatments are inadequate, and there is a pressing need for new therapeutics. N-Myristoyltransferase (NMT) remains one of the few genetically validated drug targets in these parasites. Here, we sought to pharmacologically validate this enzyme in Leishmania. A focused set of 1600 pyrazolyl sulfonamide compounds was screened against L. major NMT in a robust high-throughput biochemical assay. Several potent inhibitors were identified with marginal selectivity over the human enzyme. There was little correlation between the enzyme potency of these inhibitors and their cellular activity against L. donovani axenic amastigotes, and this discrepancy could be due to poor cellular uptake due to the basicity of these compounds. Thus, a series of analogues were synthesized with less basic centers. Although most of these compounds continued to suffer from relatively poor antileishmanial activity, our most potent inhibitor of LmNMT (DDD100097, Ki of 0.34 nM) showed modest activity against L. donovani intracellular amastigotes (EC50 of 2.4 μM) and maintained a modest therapeutic window over the human enzyme. Two unbiased approaches, namely, screening against our cosmid-based overexpression library and thermal proteome profiling (TPP), confirm that DDD100097 (compound 2) acts on-target within parasites. Oral dosing with compound 2 resulted in a 52% reduction in parasite burden in our mouse model of VL. Thus, NMT is now a pharmacologically validated target in Leishmania. The challenge in finding drug candidates remains to identify alternative strategies to address the drop-off in activity between enzyme inhibition and in vitro activity while maintaining sufficient selectivity over the human enzyme, both issues that continue to plague studies in this area.

Highlights

  • Visceral leishmaniasis (VL), caused by infection with the protozoan parasites Leishmania donovani and L. infantum, is the second largest parasitic killer after malaria with more than 200 million people currently at risk from infection

  • We reported a pyrazolyl sulfonamide series that emerged from a high-throughput compound library screen against Trypanosoma brucei N-myristoyltransferase (TbNMT) (Figure 1, exemplified by compound 1).[11]

  • As a result of these studies, a number of potent NMT inhibitors were developed including the lead compound DDD85646 which was curative in mouse models of stage 1 Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT)

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Summary

Introduction

Visceral leishmaniasis (VL), caused by infection with the protozoan parasites Leishmania donovani and L. infantum, is the second largest parasitic killer after malaria with more than 200 million people currently at risk from infection. Despite the development of numerous high affinity inhibitors capable of inhibiting the recombinant enzyme in assays and selectively targeting NMT in cells,[14−18] this enzyme has only been pharmacologically validated in the African trypanosome, where DDD85646, a low nM inhibitor of the enzyme, was able to cure a mouse model of stage one African sleeping sickness.[11] While it is tempting to assume that NMT will be amenable to pharmacological intervention in disease models of VL and Chagas’ disease, this is not certain to be the case. We use two unbiased methodologies to confirm on-target activity in cells and, for the first time, demonstrate efficacy of our lead compound in a mouse model of VL. The implications of these findings for the development of more potent and efficacious NMT inhibitors for the treatment of VL are discussed

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