6533b856fe1ef96bd12b2780

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Highly potent artemisinin-derived dimers and trimers: Synthesis and evaluation of their antimalarial, antileukemia and antiviral activities

Cornelia VoigtländerChristoph ReiterSvetlana B. TsogoevaLisa GruberBarbara KappesManfred MarschallThomas EfferthCorina HuttererOliver FriedrichTony Fröhlich

subject

GanciclovirStereochemistrymedicine.medical_treatmentDimerClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceDihydroartemisininAntiviral AgentsBiochemistryAntimalarialschemistry.chemical_compoundDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansPotencyDoxorubicinArtemisininMolecular BiologyIC50Molecular StructureOrganic ChemistryAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicCombinatorial chemistryArtemisininsIn vitrochemistryMolecular Medicinemedicine.drug

description

New pharmaceutically active compounds can be obtained by modification of existing drugs to access more effective agents in the wake of drug resistance amongst others. To achieve this goal the concept of hybridization was established during the last decade. We employed this concept by coupling two artemisinin-derived precursors to obtain dimers or trimers with increased in vitro activity against Plasmodiumfalciparum 3D7 strain, leukemia cells (CCRF-CEM and multidrug-resistant subline CEM/ADR5000) and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV). Dimer 4 (IC50 of 2.6 nM) possess superior antimalarial activity compared with its parent compound artesunic acid(3) (IC50 of 9.0 nM). Dimer5 and trimers6 and 7 display superior potency against both leukemia cell lines (IC50 up to 0.002 μM for CCRF-CEM and IC50 up to 0.20 μM for CEM/ADR5000) and are even more active than clinically used doxorubicin (IC50 1.61 μM for CEM/ADR5000). With respect to anti-HCMV activity, trimer6 is the most efficient hybrid (IC50 0.04 μM) outperforming ganciclovir (IC50 2.6 μM), dihydroartemisinin(IC50 >10 μM) and artesunic acid (IC50 3.8 μM).

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bmc.2015.07.048