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A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria

Tuberculosis (TB) and malaria continue to be major public health concerns, globally claiming 2-3 million deaths every year. A number of efficacious drugs are available for the treatment of TB and malaria, which, through various combination therapies, are fully effective in treating these diseases. H...

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Main Author: Kaur, Gurminder
Other Authors: Chibale, Kelly
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemistry 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kaur, Gurminder
author2 Chibale, Kelly
author_browse Chibale, Kelly
Kaur, Gurminder
author_facet Chibale, Kelly
Kaur, Gurminder
author_sort Kaur, Gurminder
collection Thesis
description Tuberculosis (TB) and malaria continue to be major public health concerns, globally claiming 2-3 million deaths every year. A number of efficacious drugs are available for the treatment of TB and malaria, which, through various combination therapies, are fully effective in treating these diseases. However, the wide spread resistance in M. tuberculosis (Mtb) and P. falciparum, the causative agents of TB and malaria, respectively, has made the existing therapies less effective. Thus novel agents able to circumvent drug resistance and other challenges associated with existing TB and malaria treatments are urgently needed. The development of a new drug is a lengthy and costly process; therefore, approaches that can save both time and money need to be emphasised. Drug repositioning is one such approach that has been applied in this project. Drug repositioning basically involves a situation where a drug active in one disease is derivatised or used as a template for the synthesis of derivatives active in another disease. This approach has the potential to significantly shorten the drug discovery process. This study focused on the repositioning of two drugs, the antibacterial agent fusidic acid and the antipsychotic agent metergoline, in TB and/or malaria via medicinal chemistry approaches. New semisynthetic derivatives of fusidic acid and metergoline were synthesized and evaluated for antimycobacterial activity against the H37Rv strain of Mtb and antiplasmodial activity against the NF54 strain of P. falciparum.
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publishDate 2017
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/23462 A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria Kaur, Gurminder Chibale, Kelly Chemistry Tuberculosis (TB) and malaria continue to be major public health concerns, globally claiming 2-3 million deaths every year. A number of efficacious drugs are available for the treatment of TB and malaria, which, through various combination therapies, are fully effective in treating these diseases. However, the wide spread resistance in M. tuberculosis (Mtb) and P. falciparum, the causative agents of TB and malaria, respectively, has made the existing therapies less effective. Thus novel agents able to circumvent drug resistance and other challenges associated with existing TB and malaria treatments are urgently needed. The development of a new drug is a lengthy and costly process; therefore, approaches that can save both time and money need to be emphasised. Drug repositioning is one such approach that has been applied in this project. Drug repositioning basically involves a situation where a drug active in one disease is derivatised or used as a template for the synthesis of derivatives active in another disease. This approach has the potential to significantly shorten the drug discovery process. This study focused on the repositioning of two drugs, the antibacterial agent fusidic acid and the antipsychotic agent metergoline, in TB and/or malaria via medicinal chemistry approaches. New semisynthetic derivatives of fusidic acid and metergoline were synthesized and evaluated for antimycobacterial activity against the H37Rv strain of Mtb and antiplasmodial activity against the NF54 strain of P. falciparum. 2017-01-26T13:59:22Z 2017-01-26T13:59:22Z 2016 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23462 eng application/pdf Department of Chemistry Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kaur, Gurminder
A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
title_full A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
title_fullStr A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
title_full_unstemmed A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
title_short A medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
title_sort medicinal chemistry approach to drug repositioning in the treatment of tuberculosis and malaria
topic Chemistry
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23462
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AT kaurgurminder medicinalchemistryapproachtodrugrepositioninginthetreatmentoftuberculosisandmalaria