Antimalarial activity of isoquine against Kenyan Plasmodium falciparum clinical isolates and association with polymorphisms in pfcrt and pfmdr1 genes

John Okombo, Steven M. Kiara, Abdi Abdirahman, Leah Mwai, Eric Ohuma, Steffen Borrmann, Alexis Nzila, Steve Ward

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background

The use of amodiaquine in prophylaxis is associated with serious toxicity, resulting from its metabolic conversion into a reactive quinone-imine metabolite by the hepatic cytochrome P450. To circumvent this toxicity, several amodiaquine analogues that lack the potential to form a quinone-imine derivative, while retaining antimalarial activity, have been designed. Isoquine is one of these promising molecules that has already reached Phase I clinical trials in humans.

Methods

We analysed the in vitro activity of isoquine against 62 Plasmodium falciparum isolates collected in Kenya and the association of this activity with polymorphisms in pfcrt and pfmdr1 genes.

Results

The median concentration of isoquine that inhibited 50% of parasite growth (IC50) was 9 nM, compared with 56 nM chloroquine, 8 nM amodiaquine, 10 nM desethylamodiaquine, 69 nM lumefantrine and 1 nM dihydroartemisinin. Isoquine activity was correlated with polymorphisms in pfcrt at codon 76, but not in pfmdr1 at codon 86.

Conclusions

The high activity of isoquine against field isolates, including chloroquine-resistant isolates, with IC50 <10 nM, warrants its further development as an antimalarial.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberdks471
Pages (from-to)786-788
Number of pages3
JournalJournal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Volume68
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2013

Keywords

  • Amodiaquine
  • Cross-resistance
  • Drug resistance

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