Abstract
The status of chemotherapy as the main strategy in malaria control is rapidly being eroded by development of drug resistant Plasmodia, causing malaria to be dubbed a “re-emerging disease”. To counter this misfortune, there is an urgent need to develop novel antimalarial drugs capable of delaying resistance, or circumventing it altogether. Mode of action of antimalarial drugs, inter alia, has a bearing on their useful therapeutic lives (UTLs), with single target drugs having short UTLs compared with drugs which possess pleiotropic action. Quinolines and artemisinins are the two classes of drugs with pleiotropic action and subsequently long UTLs. All other antimalarials are single-target drugs, and have been rendered ineffective within 1 to 5 years of their introduction for clinical use. This strongly underlines the need for development of new antimalarial therapies possessing long UTLs. The present review explores novel drug targets within the malaria parasite that may be exploited in the search for novel drugs that possess long and UTLs.
Keywords: Malaria therapy, therapeutic life, novel targets, drug resistance, rational antimalarial design, chemotherapy, drug resistant Plasmodia, quinolines, artemisinins, pleiotropic action
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title:Novel Drug Targets in Malaria Parasite with Potential to Yield Antimalarial Drugs with Long Useful Therapeutic Lives
Volume: 18 Issue: 24
Author(s): Francis W. Muregi, Hannah Nyakio Wamakima and Francis T. Kimani
Affiliation:
Keywords: Malaria therapy, therapeutic life, novel targets, drug resistance, rational antimalarial design, chemotherapy, drug resistant Plasmodia, quinolines, artemisinins, pleiotropic action
Abstract: The status of chemotherapy as the main strategy in malaria control is rapidly being eroded by development of drug resistant Plasmodia, causing malaria to be dubbed a “re-emerging disease”. To counter this misfortune, there is an urgent need to develop novel antimalarial drugs capable of delaying resistance, or circumventing it altogether. Mode of action of antimalarial drugs, inter alia, has a bearing on their useful therapeutic lives (UTLs), with single target drugs having short UTLs compared with drugs which possess pleiotropic action. Quinolines and artemisinins are the two classes of drugs with pleiotropic action and subsequently long UTLs. All other antimalarials are single-target drugs, and have been rendered ineffective within 1 to 5 years of their introduction for clinical use. This strongly underlines the need for development of new antimalarial therapies possessing long UTLs. The present review explores novel drug targets within the malaria parasite that may be exploited in the search for novel drugs that possess long and UTLs.
Export Options
About this article
Cite this article as:
W. Muregi Francis, Nyakio Wamakima Hannah and T. Kimani Francis, Novel Drug Targets in Malaria Parasite with Potential to Yield Antimalarial Drugs with Long Useful Therapeutic Lives, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2012; 18 (24) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161212801327239
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161212801327239 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
- Author Guidelines
- Graphical Abstracts
- Fabricating and Stating False Information
- Research Misconduct
- Post Publication Discussions and Corrections
- Publishing Ethics and Rectitude
- Increase Visibility of Your Article
- Archiving Policies
- Peer Review Workflow
- Order Your Article Before Print
- Promote Your Article
- Manuscript Transfer Facility
- Editorial Policies
- Allegations from Whistleblowers
- Announcements
Related Articles
-
Patient Radiation Doses in Interventional Cardiology Procedures
Current Cardiology Reviews Doxycycline in Mitochondrial Mediated Pathway of Apoptosis: A Systematic Review
Anti-Cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry Temozolomide: An Update on Pharmacological Strategies to Increase its Antitumour Activity
Medicinal Chemistry Reviews - Online (Discontinued) Activation of PI3K/Akt/mTOR Pathway and Dual Inhibitors of PI3K and mTOR in Endometrial Cancer
Current Medicinal Chemistry Histone Lysine-Specific Methyltransferases and Demethylases in Carcinogenesis: New Targets for Cancer Therapy and Prevention
Current Cancer Drug Targets STAT-1 and STAT-3: Closely Related Transcription Factors with Antagonistic Effects on Cell Proliferation and Apoptosis
Current Genomics Can Breast Cancer Stem Cells Evade the Immune System?
Current Medicinal Chemistry Pharmaceutical Targeting of the Brain
Current Pharmaceutical Design Perspectives Offered by Single-Domain Antibodies in Clinical Diagnostic of Pediatric Tumors
Current Medicinal Chemistry The Transcription Factor ETS-1: Its Role in Tumour Development and Strategies for its Inhibition
Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry Blocking HIV-1 Vif Restores a Natural Mechanism of Intracellular Antiviral Defense
Current Drug Targets - Immune, Endocrine & Metabolic Disorders Update on MDS Therapy: From Famine to Feast
Cardiovascular & Hematological Agents in Medicinal Chemistry Paraneoplastic Pemphigus: Autoimmune-Cancer Nexus in the Skin
Anti-Cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry A Review of the Primer Approximation Multiplex PCR (PAMP) Technique for Detecting Large Scale Cancer Genomic Lesions
Current Bioinformatics Glycosidated Phospholipids – a Promising Group of Anti-Tumour Lipids
Anti-Cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry Tumor Stem Cell Niches: A New Functional Framework for the Action of Anticancer Drugs
Recent Patents on Anti-Cancer Drug Discovery Is the Expression of Deoxynucleoside Kinases and 5'-nucleotidases in Animal Tissues Related to the Biological Effects of Nucleoside Analogs?
Current Medicinal Chemistry Carbon Nanotubes: Classification, Method of Preparation and Pharmaceutical Application
Current Drug Delivery In Silico Analysis of Amino Acid Sequences in Relation to Specificity and Physiochemical Properties of Mesophilic and Thermophilic Antileukemic L-Asparaginases
Current Biotechnology Heat Shock Protein 90 Inhibitors in Oncology
Current Proteomics