INICSA   23916
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
capítulos de libros
Título:
Antidepressants Used as Chemotherapy for Trypanosoma cruzi Infection: Phenothiazines and Related Compounds
Autor/es:
PAGLINI PA; LO PRESTI MS; RIVAROLA HW
Libro:
Frontiers in Anti-Infective Drug Discovery
Editorial:
Bentham Science
Referencias:
Año: 2015; p. 31 - 67
Resumen:
Phenothiazines and related compounds are tricyclic drugs used in psychiatric treatments as antidepressants, anxyolitics and antipsychotics. Among their different biological activities they have potent antifungal, antibacterial and antiplasmid activity. Currently, there are numerous phenothiazines derivatives; they all share a common chemical structure: they present three rings, two of them being benzene joined by a sulfur atom and a nitrogen atom. A slight variation in the substitution pattern of these drugs can cause clear differences in their pharmacological activities. One of the most important properties they have is their liability to oxidation by many oxidizing agents. We have studied the effect of some phenothiazines and related compounds upon Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease. The drugs currently used for the treatment of this disease have high toxicity and parasites often present resistance. Phenothiazines have been proved to inhibit trypanothione reductase, an enzyme present in these tripanosomatides that is essential for their redox defense system and that has been widely identified as a drug target. These tricyclic drugs also had other trypanocidal effects upon T. cruzi in culture: anticalmodulin action, mitochondrial disruption and cell membrane disorganization. These drugs were also effective for the treatment of mice infected with different T. cruzi strains, since they modified the natural evolution of the infection; noteworthy is the fact that cardiac function and survival of treated animals were not different from non-infected controls. Phenothiazines and related compounds should therefore be considered as promising trypanocidal agents for the treatment of Chagas disease.