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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

Monoxyde d'azote (NO) et trypanosomose africaine expérimentale chez le rat / Nitric oxide (NO) and experimental african trypanosomiasis in the rat

Amrouni, Donia 19 July 2010 (has links)
Grâce à un modèle expérimental de la trypanosomose humaine Africaine (THA ou maladie du sommeil), le rat infecté par Trypanosoma brucei brucei, nous avons examiné l’implication du monoxyde d’azote (NO) dans le développement de cette pathologie. Des variations opposées de la concentration de ce composé ont été observées chez les animaux infectés, au niveau des compartiments périphérique et central : le NO diminue au niveau du sang et augmente au niveau cérébral. Ces changements sont dépendants de la NO-synthase inductible (iNOS). Au niveau périphérique, la diminution du NO qui survient favorise l’installation du parasite car la pression trypanocide de ce composé est diminuée. Dans cette situation, la L-arginine, le substrat à la base de la synthèse du NO, est utilisée pour la synthèse de polyamines, des composés nécessaires à la croissance du parasite. Ces mécanismes sont très probablement déclenchés par le trypanosome via ses facteurs solubles. Au niveau cérébral, la synthèse du NO est aussi soumise à des régulations qui impliquent l’arginase et la NG, NG-diméthylarginine diméthylaminohydrolase (DDAH). Tandis que l’activité de l’arginase demeure constante, celle de la DDAH augmente au cours de l’infection en accord avec les données des western-blot et des amino-acides. Cette augmentation, qui dépend essentiellement de l’isoforme DDAH-2, conduit à une augmentation du NO cérébral dont les propriétés sont trypanocides. Ces changements, contraires à ceux observés en périphérie, sont défavorables à la survie du trypanosome au niveau du cerveau. Ils pourraient constituer une protection supplémentaire contre l’entrée des trypanosomes dans cet organe / By way of an experimental model of human African trypanosomiasis (HAT or sleeping sickness), the rat infected by Trypanosoma brucei brucei, we examined the involvement of nitric oxide (NO) in the development of this pathology. In the infected animals, opposite variations in NO concentration were observedeither at peripheral or brain compartments: NO decreases in blood but increases in brain. These changes are dependent on the activity of the inducible NO-synthase (iNOS). In periphery, the decrease observed in NO concentration favors the parasite entrance because the trypanocidal pressure exerted by NO is decreased. In such a situation, L-arginine, the substrate conducing to the synthesis of NO, is employed for the synthesis of polyamines, a category of compounds necessary for the parasite growth. It is likely that above mechanisms might be triggered by parasites. In brain, NO synthesis is submitted to additive complex regulatory processes implying arginase and NG, NG-dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH). While the arginase activity remains constant, that of DDAH increases throughout the infection process in keeping with western-blot and amino acids data. This increase, depending mainly on DDAH-2 isoform, lasts in a brain NO increase which enhance the trypanocidal pressure. Above changes, opposite to those observed in periphery, are not favorable to the parasite survival in brain. They might constitute an additive protection against the parasite entry in this organ
142

Synthèse et étude de l'activité anti-kinétoplastidés de nouvelles 8-nitroquinoléin-2(1H))-ones bioactivées par les nitroréductases de type 1 / Synthesis and study of the antikinetoplastid activity of new 8-nitroquinolin-2(1H)-ones bioactivated by type 1 nitroreductases

Pedron, Julien 05 October 2018 (has links)
Les kinétoplastidés sont des protozoaires flagellés responsables de maladies tropicales négligées mortelles telles que la leishmaniose viscérale (L. donovani et L. infantum) ou la trypanosomiase humaine africaine (T. brucei), pour lesquelles les traitements disponibles sont très limités. Depuis quelques années, on observe un regain d'intérêt pour le développement de nitrohétérocycles aromatiques anti-infectieux tels que le delamanide et le féxinidazole. De récentes études indiquent que l'activité anti-kinétoplastidés de ces dérivés repose sur leur bioactivation sélective par des nitroréductases parasitaires, conduisant à la formation de métabolites réduits électrophiles, fortement cytotoxiques. Suite à des études préliminaires réalisées dans notre équipe en série 8-nitroquinoléin-2(1H)-one, ces travaux de thèse portent sur la synthèse et l'étude in vitro de l'activité antiparasitaire de 80 dérivés notamment fonctionnalisés en positions 3 et 6 du pharmacophore par divers motifs, notamment via la mise au point de réactions d'halogénation sélective et de couplages pallado-catalysés. Ainsi, 5 nouvelles molécules hits (4 anti-kinétoplastidés et 1 sélective de T. brucei) ont été identifiées (0,01 µM ≤ CI50 ≤ 7 µM et 13 < IS < 1500), trois d'entre-elles étant des substrats sélectifs des nitroréductases parasitaires de type I. Afin de préciser les relations structure-activité, une étude des potentiels de réduction a également été menée. Des études physico-chimiques (solubilité, test de perméabilité PAMPA) et pharmacocinétiques in vitro (stabilité microsomale et fixation à l'albumine humaine) sont venues compléter ce travail. Enfin, des évaluations de la mutagénicité et de la génotoxicité de ces hits sur des cellules procaryotes et humaines ont été conduites, dans le but de statuer sur leur potentiel pharmaceutique antiparasitaire humain et vétérinaire. / Kinetoplastids are flagellated protozoan parasites responsible for lethal neglected tropical diseases, such as visceral leishmaniasis (L. donovani and L. infantum) or sleeping sickness (T. brucei brucei), for which very few drugs are available. Nowadays, nitroheterocyclic compounds present a renewed interest as anti-infective agents, as illustrated by the development of fexinidazole and delamanid. Some recent studies demonstrated that the antikinetoplastid activity of these derivatives involves their selective bioactivation by parasitic nitroreductases, leading to the formation of electrophilic reduced metabolites, highly cytotoxic. Based on preliminary studies conducted in our team in 8-nitroquinolin-2(1H)-one series, this PhD work is about the synthesis and in vitro antiparasitic study of 80 derivatives mainly functionalized at positions 3 and 6 of the pharmacophore by various substituents, especially via the optimization of selective halogenation and pallado-catalyzed cross coupling reactions. Thereby, 5 new hit compounds (4 antikinetoplastid and 1 selective of T. brucei) were identified (0.01 µM ≤ IC50 ≤ 7 µM and 13 < SI < 1500), three of them being selective substrates of type I parasitic nitroreductases. In order to refine the structure-activity relationship studies, an analysis of reduction potentials was also conducted. In vitro physicochemical (solubility, PAMPA permeability assay) and pharmacokinetic (microsomal stability and human albumin binding) experiments completed this work. Finally, the mutagenicity and genotoxicity evaluations of these new hit compounds toward prokaryotic and human cells were realized, in order to assess their human and veterinary antiparasitic pharmaceutical potential.
143

Salvage and de novo synthesis of nucleotides in Trypanosoma brucei and mammalian cells

Fijolek, Artur January 2008 (has links)
All living cells are dependent on nucleic acids for their survival. The genetic information stored in DNA is translated into functional proteins via a messenger molecule, the ribonucleic acid (RNA). Since DNA and RNA can be considered as polymers of nucleotides (NTPs), balanced pools of NTPs are crucial to nucleic acid synthesis and repair. The de novo reduction of ribonucleoside diphosphates (NDPs) to deoxyribonucleoside diphosphates (dNDPs), the precursors for DNA synthesis, is catalyzed by the enzyme ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). In cycling cells the dominant form of mammalian RNR consists of two proteins called R1 and R2. A proteasome-mediated degradation completely deprives postmitotic cells of R2 protein. The nonproliferating cells use instead a p53 inducible small RNR subunit, called p53R2 to synthesize dNTPs for mitochondrial DNA replication and DNA repair. To address the ongoing controversy regarding the localization and subsequently function and regulation of RNR subunits, the subcellular localization of all the mammalian RNR subunits during the cell cycle and after DNA damage was followed as a part of this thesis. Irrespective of the employed methodology, only a cytosolic localization could be observed leading to a conclusion that the dNTPs are synthesized in the cytosol and transported into the nucleus or mitochondria for DNA synthesis and repair. Thus, our data do not support the suggestion that nuclear translocation is a new additional mechanism regulating ribonucleotide reduction in mammalian cells. In an attempt to find a cure for African sleeping sickness, a lethal disease caused by a human pathogen, Trypanosoma brucei, nucleotide metabolism of the parasite was studied. The trypanosomes exhibit strikingly low CTP pools compared with mammalian cells and they also lack salvage of cytidine/cytosine making the parasite CTP synthetase a potential target for treatment of the disease. Following expression, purification and kinetic studies of the recombinant T. brucei CTP synthetase it was found that the enzyme has a higher Km value for UTP than the mammalian CTP synthetase. In combination with a lower UTP pool the high Km may account for the low CTP pool in trypanosomes. The activity of the trypanosome CTP synthetase was irreversibly inhibited by the glutamine analog acivicin, a drug extensively tested as an antitumor agent. Daily injections of acivicin to trypanosome-infected mice were sufficient to suppress the parasite infections. The drug was shown to be trypanocidal when added to cultured bloodstream T. brucei for four days at 1 uM concentration. Therefore, acivicin may qualify as a drug with “desirable” properties, i.e. cure within 7 days, according to the current Target Product Profiles of WHO and DNDi. Trypanosomes lack de novo purine biosynthesis and are therefore dependent on exogenous purines such as adenosine that is taken up from the blood by high-affinity transporters. We found that besides the cleavage-dependent pathway, where adenosine is converted to adenine by inosine-adenosine-guanosine-nucleoside hydrolase, T. brucei can also salvage adenosine by adenosine kinase (AK). The efficient adenosine transport combined with a high-affinity AK yields a strong salvage system in T. brucei, but on the other hand makes the parasites highly sensitive to adenosine analogs such as adenine arabinoside (Ara-A). The cleavage-resistant Ara-A was shown to be readily taken up by the parasites and phosphorylated by the TbAK-dependent pathway, inhibiting trypanosome proliferation and survival by incorporation into nucleic acids and by affecting nucleotide levels in the parasite.
144

In silico investigation of glossina morsitans promoters

Mwangi, Sarah Wambui January 2013 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Tsetse flies (Glossina spp) are the biological vectors for Trypanosomes, the causative magents of Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT). HAT is a debilitating disease that continues to present a major public health problem and a key factor limiting rural development in vast regions of tropical Africa. To augment vector control efforts, the International Glossina Genome Initiative (IGGI) was established in 2004 with the ultimate goal of generating a fully annotated whole genome sequence for Glossina morsitans. A working draft genome of Glossina morsitans was availed in 2011. In this thesis, transcriptional regulatory features in Glossina morsitans were analysed using the draft genome. A method for TSS identification in the newly sequenced Glossina morsitans genome was developed using TSS-seq tags sampled from two developmental stages of Glossina morsitans. High throughput next generation sequencing reads obtained from Glossina morsitans larvae and pupae were used to locate transcription start sites (TSS) in the Glossina morsitans genome. TSS-seq tag clusters, defined as a minimum number of reads at the 5’ predicted UTR or first coding exon, were used to define transcription start sites. A total of 3134 tag clusters were identified on the Glossina genome. Approximately 45.4% (1424) of the tag clusters mapped to the first coding exons or their proximal predicted 5’UTR regions and include 31 tag clusters that mapped to transposons. A total of 1101 (35.1%) tag clusters mapped outside the genic region and/or scaffolds without gene predictions and may correspond to previously un-annotated transcripts or noncoding RNA TSS. The core promoter regions were classified as narrow or broad based on the number of TSS positions within a TSS-seq cluster. Majority (95%) of the core promoters analysed in this study were of the broad type while only 5% were of the narrow type. Comparison of canonical core promoter motif occurences between random and bona fide core promoters showed that, generally, the number of motifs in biologically functional genomic windows in the true dataset exceeded those in the random dataset (p <= 0.00164, 0.00135, 0.00185 for the narrow, broad with peak and broad without peak categories respectively). Frequency of motif co-occurrence in core promoter was found to be fundamentally different across various initiation patterns. Narrow core promoters recorded higher frequency of the TATA-box and INR motifs and two-way motif co-occurrence showed that the TATA-box-INR pair is over-represented in the narrow category. Broad core promoters showed higher frequency of the BREd and MTE motifs and two-way motif co-occurrence showed that the MTE-DPE pair is over-represented in broad core promoters. TATA-less promoters account for 77% of the core promoters in this analysis. TATA-less core promoters showed a higher frequency of the MTE and INR motifs in contrast to observations in Drosophila where the DPE motif has been reported to occur frequently in TATA-less promoters. These motif combinations suggest their equal importance to transcription in their corresponding promoter classes in Glossina morsitans.
145

Detecção de reações cruzadas por Leishmania spp. e Trypanosoma spp. em cães pelo ensaio imunoenzimático indireto, pela reação de imunofluorescência indireta e reação em cadeia de polimerase /

Viol, Milena Araúz. January 2011 (has links)
Orientador: Katia Denise Saraiva Bresciani / Banca: Renato Andreotti e Silva / Banca: Valéria Marçal Felix de Lima / Resumo: O objetivo deste estudo foi detectar reações cruzadas por Leishmania spp. e Trypanossoma cruzi pelo Ensaio Imunoenzimático Indireto (ELISA), pela Reação de Imunofluorescência Indireta (RIFI) e pela Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase (PCR). Assim, foram colhidas 408 amostras sanguíneas de cães domiciliados no município de Araçatuba,SP, de ambos os sexos, de diversas raças e com idade a partir de seis meses. Em relação à Leishmania spp., pela RIFI, 14,95 % (61/408) foram reagentes. A positividade por meio do ELISA, foi de 20,10% (82/408) e pela PCR, 29,66% (121/408), com diferença significativa para o sexo e a idade destes animais (p<0,05). Para Trypanosoma spp., a ocorrência de anticorpos pelo ELISA foi de 10,54% (43/408) e pela PCR, 2,45% (10/408) cães foram positivos. Pela RIFI, 10,29% (42/408) dos animais foram considerados positivos e somente o sexo apresentou diferença significativa (p<0,05). Neste trabalho, constatou-se que 10,54%(43/408) dos animais foram soropositivos por ELISA para Trypanosoma spp., sendo que 79,07%(34/43) obtiveram resultados positivos no diagnóstico molecular para Leishmania spp. e dos 10,29% (42/408) positivos por RIFI, 95,24% (40/42) dos cães confirmaram a infecção por este parasita. Por meio dos resultados obtidos, pode-se inferir que foram evidenciadas reações cruzadas nos ensaios sorológicos para ambos os protozoários, nos animais analisados neste trabalho / Abstract: The aim of this study was to detect cross-infection by Leishmania spp. and Trypanosoma spp. by indirect immunosorbent assay (ELISA), by Indirect Immunofluorescence (IFA) and by the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). Thus, blood samples were collected from 408 domestic dogs of both sexes, different races and ages from six months. For Leishmania spp. by IFA, 14.95% (61/408) were positive. Positive by ELISA, was 20.10% (82/408), and PCR 29.66% (121/408), with significant difference for sex and age of animals (p <0.05). For Trypanosoma spp., the occurrence of antibodies by ELISA, was 10.54% (43/408), and PCR, 2.45% (10/408) dogs were positive. By IFA, 10.29% (42/408) of the animals were considered positive and only sex was significant difference (p <0.05). In this work it was found that 10.54% (43/408) animals were seropositive by ELISA for Trypanosoma spp., 79.07% (34/43) had positive results in molecular diagnostic for Leishmania spp. and 10.29% (42/408) positive by IFA, 95.24% (40/42) dogs confirmed the infection by this parasite. Through the results obtained can be inferred that cross-infection were observed by both protozoa in animals of this paper / Mestre
146

Characterisation of the mechanism of human serum resistance in T.b.gambiense

Felu, Cécile 15 September 2006 (has links)
The two human pathogenic sub-species T.b.gambiense and T.b.rhodesiense can be distinguished from the morphologically identical T.b.brucei by their ability to infect humans, enabling them to cause sleeping sickness. This is because they are resistant to lysis by the lytic factor (APOL-I) present in normal human serum (NHS). In T.b.rhodesiense resistance to this lytic factor is due to a truncated VSG gene termed SRA which blocks lysis by interacting with APOL-I in the lysosome. SRA does not exist in T.b.gambiense. The search for a similar truncated VSG gene lead to the identification of a T.b.gambiense specific glycoprotein termed TGSGP. TGSGP transfected alone into the sensitive T.b.brucei is unable to confer resistance to this sub-species. This is either due to incorrect processing of this gene is this sub-species or because TGSGP requires a partner to confer resistance.<p><p>In the search for a partner, the genomic locus of TGSGP was cloned and sequenced. We found that TGSGP is linked to a truncated gene homologous to the S.cerevisiae AUT1 gene, a gene implicated in autophagy and more specifically in membrane expansion. Southern blot hybridization and PCR analysis on genomic DNA from several isolates demonstrated that this feature was a specific to T.b.gambiense. In addition, we observed a correlation between the aut1 allele size and the geographical origin of the isolate.<p><p>Since in trypanosomes lysis by NHS is due to an uncontrolled expansion of the lysosome, we speculated that the truncation of the aut1 allele could be implication in the resistance to human serum. We characterized the genomic organisation of the AUT1 locus. T.b.brucei possesses two native AUT1 alleles whilst T.b.gambiense possesses a truncated aut1 allele, as well as a native AUT1 allele. We showed that in the T.b.gambiense LiTAR isolate (aut1/AUT1), despite the presence of a wild-type allele this gene is no longer expressed at the mRNA and protein level. Our complimentary results by run-on transcription assay showed that the AUT1 region is transcribed but that the messenger is unstable. LiTAR is a functional knock-out for AUT1, but Northern blot analysis on several T.b.gambiense isolates showed that this is not a generalised T.b.gambiense characteristic. <p><p>We explored the role of AUT1 in trypanosomes by invalidation of the AUT1 gene in T.b.brucei and by the over-expression of the AUT1 and aut1 alleles in T.b.brucei. By functional analysis of AUT1 knocked-down cells we showed that AUT1 is not essential in trypanosomes. By recreating in T.b.brucei the T.b.gambiense AUT1/aut1 genotype we were able to show that the expression of the aut1 UTR down-regulated the expression of the wild-type AUT1 allele. We speculated that this may be due to a natural RNAi mechanism. Par northern blot, using probes covering the potential target region of AUT1, we detected a 50nt small RNA specific to T.b.gambiense. In addition, we showed that in a LiTAR strain in which the RNAi pathway was abolished AUT1 expression is restored. <p><p>We continued to investigate TGSGP’s role in the resistance to human serum by invalidation of TGSGP in T.b.gambiense and by expressing TGSGP in the NHS-sensitive T.b.brucei. Because T.b.gambiense cannot be cultured in vitro we established a new in vivo transfection technique and as the knock-out of TGSGP is most probably lethal, we created an inducible RNAi T.b.gambiense cell strain. These indispensable tools will be used to test whether invalidation TGSGP is sufficient to confer resistance to NHS. Many strategies were tested in order to correctly expressing TGSGP in T.b.brucei; in none of these transfectants was TGSGP correctly located in the flagellar pocket as is the case in T.b.gambiense and only partial resistance was ever obtained. In order to identify the factors in human serum that could interacts with TGSGP, we subjected NHS to affinity chromatography using TGSGP as bait. We showed that TGSGP interacts with APOA-I, a major component of HDLs.<p> / Doctorat en sciences, Spécialisation biologie moléculaire / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
147

Generation, regulation and function of morphology in Leishmania and Trypanosoma

Wheeler, Richard John January 2012 (has links)
Little is known about the generation of Leishmania morphology and the function of morphology in trypanosomatids, despite every species having characteristic cell shapes and undergoing changes in morphology between life cycle stages. To address this I analysed morphogenesis of the cell body and flagellum through the cell cycle of the Leishmania insect (promastigote) life cycle stage using a novel method for determining cell cycle stage from cell size and DNA content. This showed cell body morphology is generated by growth and then remodelling of cell shape around mitosis and cytokinesis. Mathematical modelling of flagellum growth indicated flagellum length continues to increase over multiple cell cycles and does not reach a defined length. I also observed little link between the cell cycle and flagellum length regulation during differentiation to the mammalian macrophage-inhabiting (amastigote) life cycle stage. Analysis of motility showed the diverse flagellar lengths of promastigote Leishmania cells bestow different swimming abilities, and the capacity of Leishmania promastigotes for highly directional swimming differs sharply from trypomastigote Trypanosoma brucei. This difference did not arise from altered flagellar beating therefore appeared to be linked to morphology. Together these indicate the mechanisms of cell body morphogenesis, flagellum length regulation, life cycle stage differentiation and the swimming abilities of the cells the morphogenetic processes generate differ significantly between Leishmania and T. brucei. These insights motivated the programming of automated micrograph analysis tools based on a new DNA staining method to support similar future morphometric analyses. This is the first comprehensive comparison of morphogenesis and function of morphology in a promastigote and a trypomastigote and, by considering these new insights in the context of existing molecular biology and the morphological diversity across many trypanosomatid species, give insight into basic Leishmania biology, the shared molecular mechanisms underlying morphogenesis and the potential functions of the diverse morphologies which are seen in different trypanosomatid species and life cycle stages.
148

Influência da radiação ionizante sobre o Trypanosoma cruzi / Influence of ionizing radiation on Trypanosoma cruzi

Szarota, Rosa Maria 22 February 2006 (has links)
A Doença de Chagas é um dos maiores problemas de saúde pública na América do Sul causando um elevado prejuízo à população. A despeito dos inúmeros esforços para o seu controle, a doença não tem cura e apresenta problemas científicos ainda não esclarecidos. Considerando-se que vários pesquisadores têm usado a radiação ionizante para modificar protozoários ou propriedades imunológicas de biomoléculas, neste trabalho foram estudados aspectos da resposta imunológica induzida em camundongos, resistentes e suscetíveis ao T. cruzi, utilizando formas irradiadas deste parasita. Doses baixas de radiação preservaram a capacidade reprodutiva e de invasão celular. Animais resistentes e suscetíveis, imunizados com os parasitas tratados por radiação, produziram anticorpos específicos. Após o desafio, os animais apresentaram baixa parasitemia, com exceção dos grupos imunizados com parasitas que receberam apenas altas doses de radiação. A seleção de formas tripomastigotas foi obtida irradiando-se os parasitas com baixas doses, o que promoveu aprimoramento da qualidade da resposta imune, a exemplo do que se observa quando da utilização de complemento. Estes dados evidenciam a importância da seleção das formas tripomastigotas para a imunização contra o T. cruzi e apontam a radiação ionizante como alternativa para este fim, uma vez que quando a seleção é feita utilizando-se complemento, depara-se com a dificuldade de sua remoção, colocando em risco o processo de imunização por introduzir substancias estranhas ao organismo. / Chagas\'s disease is one of the major public health problems in South America, promoting high prejudice to the local population. Despite the massive efforts to control it, this disease has no cure and presents puzzling unsolved questions. Considering that many researchers have used ionizing radiation to modify protozoans or biomolecules, we investigated the immunological response aspects of susceptible and resistant mice using irradiated parasites. Low radiation doses preserved the reproductive and invasive capacities of the parasite. Both susceptible and resistant animals, after immunization with irradiated parasites produced specific antibodies. After a challenge, the animals presented low parasitaemia, excepting those immunized with the antigen irradiated with higher doses. Using low radiation doses, we were able to selectively isolate trypomastigotes, leading to an improvement in the quality of the immune response, as previously reported when performing complement system assays. These data highlight the importance of selecting trypomastigote forms for immunization against T. cruz; and point towards ionizing radiation as an alternative to achieve this selection, since when this procedure is performed using complement, the subsequent steps are impaired by the difficulties to remove this component from the system.
149

Influência da radiação ionizante sobre o Trypanosoma cruzi / Influence of ionizing radiation on Trypanosoma cruzi

Rosa Maria Szarota 22 February 2006 (has links)
A Doença de Chagas é um dos maiores problemas de saúde pública na América do Sul causando um elevado prejuízo à população. A despeito dos inúmeros esforços para o seu controle, a doença não tem cura e apresenta problemas científicos ainda não esclarecidos. Considerando-se que vários pesquisadores têm usado a radiação ionizante para modificar protozoários ou propriedades imunológicas de biomoléculas, neste trabalho foram estudados aspectos da resposta imunológica induzida em camundongos, resistentes e suscetíveis ao T. cruzi, utilizando formas irradiadas deste parasita. Doses baixas de radiação preservaram a capacidade reprodutiva e de invasão celular. Animais resistentes e suscetíveis, imunizados com os parasitas tratados por radiação, produziram anticorpos específicos. Após o desafio, os animais apresentaram baixa parasitemia, com exceção dos grupos imunizados com parasitas que receberam apenas altas doses de radiação. A seleção de formas tripomastigotas foi obtida irradiando-se os parasitas com baixas doses, o que promoveu aprimoramento da qualidade da resposta imune, a exemplo do que se observa quando da utilização de complemento. Estes dados evidenciam a importância da seleção das formas tripomastigotas para a imunização contra o T. cruzi e apontam a radiação ionizante como alternativa para este fim, uma vez que quando a seleção é feita utilizando-se complemento, depara-se com a dificuldade de sua remoção, colocando em risco o processo de imunização por introduzir substancias estranhas ao organismo. / Chagas\'s disease is one of the major public health problems in South America, promoting high prejudice to the local population. Despite the massive efforts to control it, this disease has no cure and presents puzzling unsolved questions. Considering that many researchers have used ionizing radiation to modify protozoans or biomolecules, we investigated the immunological response aspects of susceptible and resistant mice using irradiated parasites. Low radiation doses preserved the reproductive and invasive capacities of the parasite. Both susceptible and resistant animals, after immunization with irradiated parasites produced specific antibodies. After a challenge, the animals presented low parasitaemia, excepting those immunized with the antigen irradiated with higher doses. Using low radiation doses, we were able to selectively isolate trypomastigotes, leading to an improvement in the quality of the immune response, as previously reported when performing complement system assays. These data highlight the importance of selecting trypomastigote forms for immunization against T. cruz; and point towards ionizing radiation as an alternative to achieve this selection, since when this procedure is performed using complement, the subsequent steps are impaired by the difficulties to remove this component from the system.
150

Planejamento, síntese e avaliação de inibidores da enzima cruzaína e de agentes tripanossomicidas derivados de imidazopiridina / Molecular design, synthesis and evaluation of cruzain inhibitors and antitrypanosomal agents based on imidazopyridines

Silva, Daniel Gedder 24 October 2017 (has links)
No capítulo 1, a modelagem HQSAR, a docagem e os estudos de ROCS foram construídos utilizando uma série de 57 inibidores de cruzaína. O melhor modelo HQSAR (q2 = 0,70, r2 = 0,95, r2test = 0,62, q2rand. = 0,09 and r2rand. = 0,26) foi utilizado para predizer a potência de 121 compostos extraídos da literatura (conjunto de dados V1), resultando em um valor de r2 satisfatório de 0,65 para essa validação externa. Uma validação externa adicional foi empregada utilizando uma série de 1223 compostos extraído dos bancos de dados ChEMBL e CDD (conjunto de dados V3); nessa validação externa o valor de AUC (área sob a curva) para a curva ROC foi de 0,70. Os mapas de contribuição, obtidos para o melhor modelo HQSAR 3.4, estão de acordo com as predições do modo de interação e com as bioatividades dos compostos estudados. Nos estudos de ROCS, a forma molecular utilizada como filtro, foi útil na rápida identificação de modificações moleculares promissoras para inibidores de cruzaína. O valor de AUC obtido com a curva ROC foi de 0,72, isso indica que o método foi muito eficiente na distinção entre inibidores ativos e inativos da enzima cruzaína. Em seguida, o melhor modelo HQSAR foi utilizado para predizer os valores de pIC50 para novos compostos. Alguns dos compostos identificados, utilizando esse método, demonstraram valores de potência calculada maior do que a série de treinamento em estudo. No capítulo 2, os efeitos sobre a potência na inibição da enzima cruzaína pela substituição de um grupo nitrila como warhead por outros grupos foi avaliada. Com a síntese de 20 compostos do tipo dipeptidil, avaliou-se a relação estrutura-atividade (SAR), baseado na troca do grupo warhead na porção P1\'. O grupo oxima foi mais potente que o grupo correspondente nitrila em 0,7 unidades logarítmicas. Os compostos do tipo dipeptidil aldeídos e azanitrila obtiveram potências mais elevadas do que o correspondente dipeptidil nitrila em duas de magnitude. Os compostos dipeptidil alfa-beta insaturados foram menos potentes do que o correspondente dipeptidil nitrila. No capítulo 3, estratégias de química medicinal foram empregadas nas sínteses de 23 novos análogos, contendo o esqueleto básico de imidazopiridina. Sete e doze compostos sintetizados exibiram EC50 <= 1µM in vitro contra os parasitos Tripanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi) e brucei (T. brucei), respectivamente. Com os resultados promissores de atividade biológica in vitro, citotoxicidade, estabilidade metabólica, ligação proteica e propriedades farmacocinéticas, o composto 41 foi selecionado como candidato para os estudos de eficácia in vivo. Esse composto foi submetido em um modelo agudo da infecção com T. cruzi em ratos (cepa Tulahuen). Depois de estabelecida a infecção, os ratos foram dosados duas vezes ao dia, durante 5 dias; e monitorados por 6 semanas usando um sistema de imagem in vivo IVIS (do inglês, \"In Vivo Imaging System\"). O composto 41 demonstrou inibição parasitária comparável com o grupo de treinamento dosado com benzonidazol. O composto 41 representa um potencial líder para o desenvolvimento de novos fármacos para o tratamento de tripanossomíases. / In chapter 1, the HQSAR, molecular docking and ROCS were applied to a dataset of 57 cruzain inhibitors. The best HQSAR model (q2 = 0.70, r2 = 0.95, r2test = 0.62, q2rand. = 0.09 and r2rand. = 0.26) was then used to predict the potencies of 121 unknown compounds (the V1 database), giving rise to a satisfactory predictive r2 value of 0.65 (external validation). By employing an extra external dataset comprising 1223 compounds (the V3 database) either retrieved from the ChEMBL or CDD databases, an overall ROC AUC (area under the curve) score well over 0.70 was obtained. The contribution maps obtained with the best HQSAR model (model 3.4) are in agreement with the predicted binding mode and with the biological potencies of the studied compounds. We also screened these compounds using the ROCS method, a Gaussian-shape volume filter able to identify quickly the shapes that match a query molecule. The AUC obtained with the ROC curves (ROC AUC) was 0.72, indicating that the method was very efficient in distinguishing between active and inactive cruzain inhibitors. These set of information guided us to propose novel cruzain inhibitors to be synthesized. Then, the best HQSAR model obtained was used to predict the pIC50 values of these new compounds. Some compounds identified using this method has shown calculated potencies higher than those which have originated them. In chapter 2, the effects on potency of cruzain inhibition of replacing a nitrile group with alternative warheads were explored; with the syntheses of 20 dipeptidyl compounds, we explored the structure activity relationships (SAR) based on exchanging of the warhead portion (P1\'). The oxime was 0.7 units more potent than the corresponding nitrile. Dipeptide aldehydes and azadipeptide nitriles were found to be two orders of magnitude more potent than the corresponding dipeptide nitriles. The vinyl esters and amides were less potent than the corresponding nitrile by between one and two orders of magnitude. In chapter 3, we synthesized 23 new imidazopyridine analogues arising from medicinal chemistry optimization at different sites on the molecule. Seven and twelve compounds exhibited an in vitro EC50 <= 1µM against Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi) and Trypanosoma brucei (T. brucei) parasites, respectively. Based on promising results of in vitro activity (EC50 &lt; 100 nM), cytotoxicity, metabolic stability, protein binding and pharmacokinetics (PK) properties, compound 41 was selected as a candidate for in vivo efficacy studies. This compound was screened in an acute mouse model against T.cruzi (Tulahuen strain). After established infection, mice were dosed twice a day for 5 days, and then monitored for 6 weeks using an in vivo imaging system (IVIS). Compound 41 demonstrated parasite inhibition comparable to the benznidazole treatment group. Compound 41 represents a potential lead for the development of drugs to treat trypanosomiasis.

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