Department of Chemistry, Department of Biochemistry, Cellular, and Molecular Biology, and Center for Infectious Diseases, Georgetown University , 37th and O Streets, NW, Washington, D.C. 20057, United States.
J Med Chem. 2013 Jul 11;56(13):5231-46. doi: 10.1021/jm400282d. Epub 2013 Apr 29.
Historically, the most successful molecular target for antimalarial drugs has been heme biomineralization within the malarial parasite digestive vacuole. Heme released from catabolized host red blood cell hemoglobin is toxic, so malarial parasites crystallize heme to nontoxic hemozoin. For years it has been accepted that a number of effective quinoline antimalarial drugs (e.g., chloroquine, quinine, amodiaquine) function by preventing hemozoin crystallization. However, recent studies over the past decade have revealed a surprising molecular diversity in quinoline-heme molecular interactions. This diversity shows that even closely related quinoline drugs may have quite different molecular pharmacology. This paper reviews the molecular diversity and highlights important implications for understanding quinoline antimalarial drug resistance and for future drug design.
从历史上看,抗疟药物最成功的分子靶标是疟原虫消化液泡内的血红素生物矿化。从被代谢的宿主红细胞血红蛋白中释放的血红素是有毒的,因此疟原虫将血红素结晶成无毒的疟色素。多年来,人们一直认为许多有效的喹啉类抗疟药物(如氯喹、奎宁、阿莫地喹)通过阻止疟色素结晶来发挥作用。然而,过去十年的研究揭示了喹啉与血红素分子相互作用的惊人的分子多样性。这种多样性表明,即使是密切相关的喹啉药物也可能具有完全不同的分子药理学。本文综述了分子多样性,并强调了对抗疟药物耐药性的理解和未来药物设计的重要意义。