Optimization and characterization of the antimalarial activity of N-aryl acetamides that are susceptible to mutations in ROM8 and CSC1

Abstract

New antimalarials are needed due to the threat of emerging resistance against existing antimalarial therapies. A phenotypic screen uncovered the N-aryl acetamide class that inhibits the development of P. falciparum asexual ring-stage parasites. The structure–activity relationship of this class was investigated, and key modifications were introduced that produced WEHI-326 with potent antimalarial activity. Enhancing the metabolic stability of this class will be a future challenge to achieve efficacy in a malaria mouse model. WEHI-326 was found to have a moderate barrier to resistance and a moderate rate of asexual kill, potently inhibited gametocyte and gamete development, and in turn, blocked the transmission of parasites to the mosquito. Forward genetics and cross-resistance profiling determined that parasites resistant to N-aryl acetamides had mutations in rhomboid protease 8 (ROM8) and the putative cation channel, CSC1. WEHI-326 will be an important tool in unraveling the role of ROM8 and CSC1 in P. falciparum development.

Description

SUPPORTING INFORMATION 1. P. falciparum wildtype and drug-resistant asexual and gametocyte and gamete dose–response curves, MIR and AReBar analyses and whole genome sequencing, mouse and transmission model data, and compound synthesis schemes and spectra. SUPPORTING INFORMATION 2. Molecular formula strings.

Keywords

Antimalarials, Malaria, N-aryl acetamides, Rhomboid protease 8 (ROM8), Putative cation channel, CSC1, Plasmodium falciparum

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Citation

Nguyen, W., Boulet, C., Dans, M.G. et al. 2025, 'Optimization and characterization of the antimalarial activity of N-aryl acetamides that are susceptible to mutations in ROM8 and CSC1', Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 68, no. 15, pp. 16613–16644, doi : 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5c01471.