Journal article

Ozonide Antimalarial Activity in the Context of Artemisinin-Resistant Malaria

C Giannangelo, FJI Fowkes, JA Simpson, SA Charman, DJ Creek

Trends in Parasitology | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2019

Abstract

The ozonides are one of the most advanced drug classes in the antimalarial development pipeline and were designed to improve on limitations associated with current front-line artemisinin-based therapies. Like the artemisinins, the pharmacophoric peroxide bond of ozonides is essential for activity, and it appears that these antimalarials share a similar mode of action, raising the possibility of cross-resistance. Resistance to artemisinins is associated with Plasmodium falciparum mutations that allow resistant parasites to escape short-term artemisinin-mediated damage (elimination half-life ~1 h). Importantly, some ozonides (e.g., OZ439) have a sustained in vivo drug exposure profile, providi..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors thank Professor Jonathan Vennerstrom for helpful discussions. This work was supported by NHMRC Project Grant #1128003, NHMRC Career Development Fellowship #1148700 (D.J.C.) #1166753 (F.J.I.F.), and NHMRC Senior Researcher Fellowship #1104975 (J.A.S.). This work was supported in part by the Australian Centre of Research Excellence on Malaria Elimination (ID#1134989).