Rocaglates as dual-targeting agents for experimental cerebral malaria.

06 Mar 2018
Langlais D, Cencic R, Moradin N, Kennedy JM, Ayi K, Brown LE, Crandall I, Tarry MJ, Schmeing M, Kain KC, Porco JA Jr, Pelletier J, Gros P

 

Cerebral malaria (CM) is a severe and rapidly progressing complication of infection by parasites that is associated with high rates of mortality and morbidity. Treatment options are currently few, and intervention with artemisinin (Art) has limited efficacy, a problem that is compounded by the emergence of resistance to Art in parasites. Rocaglates are a class of natural products derived from plants of the genus that have been shown to interfere with eukaryotic initiation factor 4A (eIF4A), ultimately blocking initiation of protein synthesis. Here, we show that the rocaglate CR-1-31B perturbs association of eIF4A (PfeIF4A) with RNA. CR-1-31B shows potent prophylactic and therapeutic antiplasmodial activity in vivo in mouse models of infection with (CM) and (blood-stage malaria), and can also block replication of different clinical isolates of in human erythrocytes infected ex vivo including drug-resistant isolates. In vivo, a single dosing of CR-1-31B in -infected animals is sufficient to provide protection against lethality. CR-1-31B is shown to dampen expression of the early proinflammatory response in myeloid cells in vitro and dampens the inflammatory response in vivo in -infected mice. The dual activity of CR-1-31B as an antiplasmodial and as an inhibitor of the inflammatory response in myeloid cells should prove extremely valuable for therapeutic intervention in human cases of CM.