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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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).