Laurequinone, a lead compound against Leishmania
Fecha
2023Resumen
Among neglected tropical diseases, leishmaniasis is one of the leading causes, not only
of deaths but also of disability-adjusted life years. This disease, caused by protozoan parasites of
the genus Leishmania, triggers different clinical manifestations, with cutaneous, mucocutaneous, and
visceral forms. As existing treatments for this parasitosis are not sufficiently effective or safe for the
patient, in this work, different sesquiterpenes isolated from the red alga Laurencia johnstonii have
been studied for this purpose. The different compounds were tested in vitro against the promastigote
and amastigote forms of Leishmania amazonensis. Different assays were also performed, including
the measurement of mitochondrial potential, determination of ROS accumulation, and chromatin
condensation, among others, focused on the detection of the cell death process known in this type of
organism as apoptosis-like. Five compounds were identified that displayed leishmanicidal activity:
laurequinone, laurinterol, debromolaurinterol, isolaurinterol, and aplysin, showing IC50 values
against promastigotes of 1.87, 34.45, 12.48, 10.09, and 54.13 µM, respectively. Laurequinone was the
most potent compound tested and was shown to be more effective than the reference drug miltefosine
against promastigotes. Different death mechanism studies carried out showed that laurequinone
appears to induce programmed cell death or apoptosis in the parasite studied. The obtained results
underline the potential of this sesquiterpene as a novel anti-kinetoplastid therapeutic agent