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Frontline drug treatments for malaria are at risk of failing due to emerging resistance, meanwhile drugs used to treat toxoplasmosis have suboptimal efficacy and safety. As demonstrated by the success of clinically used antiparasitic drugs, the diverse structural complexity and biological activity of natural products holds great potential for drug discovery and development, to address the need for new compounds with novel mechanisms. Here we screened the BioAustralis Discovery Plates Series I library, a collection of 812 microbial natural product compounds including rare microbial metabolites, against Plasmodium falciparum erythrocytic stage and Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoite parasites. We identified 219 compounds that inhibited P. falciparum growth by at least 80 % at a concentration of 2 μg/mL (1-10 μM for >90 % of compounds), whilst 149 compounds demonstrated equivalent activity against T. gondii. The active compounds were assigned based on chemical structure to more than 50 compound classes. After triaging active compounds for those with low mammalian cytotoxicity, we defined the in vitro half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC) of a selection of compounds against the parasites, identifying four compound groups with activity in the low nanomolar range. The macrocyclic lactone pladienolide B and cryptopleurine were found to be very potent against the parasites but also mammalian cells, warranting further structure-activity relationship investigation. Two groups, the monocyclic thiazole peptides, including micrococcin P1 and the thiocillins, and the pleuromutilins, exhibited both low antiparasitic IC and low cytotoxicity, highlighting their potential for further analysis. This study defines the activity of the BioAustralis Discovery Plates Series I against two apicomplexan parasites of significant global importance, providing potential new tools to study parasite biology and possible starting points for novel antiparasitic development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpddr.2025.100606 | DOI Listing |
J Pathol
September 2025
Departamento de Imunologia, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade de São Paulo (ICB/USP), São Paulo, Brazil.
We hypothesized that variants in inflammasome-related genes could influence susceptibility to gestational malaria (GM). To test this, we conducted an association study in a cohort of pregnant women from a malaria-endemic region in northern Brazil, assessing whether specific functional single nucleotide variants (SNVs) in inflammasome genes affect (1) the response to Plasmodium infection and (2) the development of placental malaria. Our findings revealed that the NLRP1 p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTurkiye Parazitol Derg
September 2025
Manisa Celal Bayar University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Parasitology, Manisa, Türkiye.
Objective: () (common juniper) is a plant that has been used for medicinal purposes for centuries. This study aims to evaluate the antiparasitic effects of ethanol, methanol, chloroform, and water extracts of fruits against , , , and
Methods: The antiparasitic activities of fruit extracts prepared at room temperature using the shaking maceration method were tested against using the ring stage survival test, and against , , and using the broth microdilution method.
Results: The chloroform extract of fruits was found to be effective on , , , and parasites at concentrations of 15, 10, 30 and 30 µg/mL, respectively.
ACS Infect Dis
September 2025
Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, United States.
Malaria treatments are compromised by drug resistance, creating an urgent need to discover new drugs. We used a phenotypic high-throughput screening (HTS) platform to identify new antimalarials, uncovering three related pyrrole-, indole-, and indoline-based series with a shared α-azacyclic acetamide core. These compounds showed fast-killing activity on asexual blood-stage parasites, were not cytotoxic, and disrupted parasite intracellular pH and Na regulation similarly to cipargamin (KAE609), a clinically advanced inhibitor of the Na pump (ATP4).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Chem
September 2025
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Institute of Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany.
New treatment strategies are required to combat the spread of drug-resistant malaria. The synthesis and preclinical evaluation of novel 3-hydroxy-propanamidines (HPAs), with modifications of the phenanthrene and the 4-fluorobenzamidine moieties, has yielded several analogs exhibiting excellent in vitro growth inhibition of drug-sensitive or resistant fresh clinical isolates and culture-adapted strains. No cytotoxicity in the human HepG2 cell line was observed, demonstrating notable parasite selectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Biodivers
September 2025
Institute of Chemistry, Federal University of Catalão, Catalão, Brazil.
Strategies have been employed to address antimalarial drug resistance, including the exploration of new therapeutic targets. In this study, the stem bark of Dalbergia miscolobium was investigated using in vitro assays against Plasmodium falciparum and pyruvate kinase II (PyrKII), an essential enzyme for parasite development. Compounds were dereplicated from ethanolic extract (IC = 9 µg/mL) using LC-HRMS, revealing active constituents: procyanidin A1 (2), biochanin (5) and formononetin (7).
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