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RESEARCH
Science
Biology
CELLULAR
BIOLOGY
Osteoporosis drugs found to combat malaria, other
diseases
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
3/1/2001
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Eric
Oldfield, Silvia Moreno and Roberto Docampo (left to right)
led a team of eight UI researchers who collborated with other
researchers the found that a series of bisphosphonate drugs
already approved to treat osteoporosis and other bone disorders
in humans carry potent anti-parasitic activity. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A series
of bisphosphonate drugs already approved to treat osteoporosis and other
bone disorders in humans carry potent anti-parasitic activity, offering
a new approach to the treatment of malaria, sleeping sickness and AIDS-related
infections such as toxoplasmosis.
Researchers from the University of Illinois, the Venezuelan Institute
for Scientific Research in Caracas and the London School of Hygiene
and Tropical Medicine report their findings in the March 15 issue of
the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. The paper is online at the journals
Web site.
"It's a very welcome development to find a class of compounds that
have strong anti-parasitic activity and are already approved for use
in humans," said Eric Oldfield, a UI professor of chemistry and
biophysics. "New drugs are urgently required in the less developed
nations, since the parasites are becoming drug resistant at an alarming
rate. And many of the current drugs are either too expensive or too
toxic to be used routinely."|
Oldfield and veterinary pathobiology professors Roberto Docampo and
Silvia Moreno led a team of eight UI researchers on the paper. Julio
A. Urbina and Simon L. Croft headed the teams from Venezuela and London,
respectively.
Parasitic protozoan diseases are the worlds most widely spread
human health problem. An estimated 3 billion people suffer from one
or more parasitic infections. Plasmodium falciparum, the causative agent
of malaria, infects 500 million people a year, resulting in 2 million
to 3 million deaths a year, while Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma cruzi
and Leishmania species cause 20 million disease cases annually. The
organism Toxoplasma gondii is the causative agent of AIDS-encephalitis.
The most common treatments for these parasitic diseases often cause
adverse side effects, requiring a stoppage of treatment.
The bisphosphonate drugs are active against the causative agents of
African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease, malaria, leishmaniasis
and toxoplasmosis, the scientists found. The drugs -- such as Merck's
Fosamax, Procter & Gambles Actonel and Novartis' Aredia --
act much as they do in inhibiting bone resorption, by targeting and
inhibiting a specific enzyme, farnesylpyrophsophate synthase, in the
parasites. (The names of the three drugs are registered trademarks of
their respective manufacturers.)
The specificity is thought to be due in part to enhanced uptake into
specialized granules called acidocalcisomes, which were discovered by
Docampo and Moreno and are present in all of the parasitic cells. "These
granules are chemically similar to bone," Docampo said, "and
we think this may contribute to drug uptake and selectivity."
The National Institutes of Health, World Health Organization, Burroughs
Wellcome Fund, Howard Hughes Medical Institutes and the American Heart
Association, Midwest, funded the work.
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