Content area
Babesiosis is a disease brought on by intraerythrocytic parasites of the genus Babesia. Current chemotherapies are accompanied by side effects and parasite relapse. Therefore, it is crucial to develop highly effective drugs against Babesia. Cipargamin (CIP) has shown inhibition against apicomplexan parasites, mainly Plasmodium and Toxoplasma. This study evaluated the growth-inhibiting properties of CIP against Babesia spp. and investigated the mechanism of CIP on B. gibsoni. The half inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of CIP against the in vitro growth of B. bovis and B. gibsoni were 20.2 ± 1.4 and 69.4 ± 2.2 nM, respectively. CIP significantly inhibited the growth of B. microti and B. rodhaini in vivo. Resistance was conferred by L921V and L921I mutations in BgATP4, which reduced the sensitivity to CIP by 6.1- and 12.8-fold. The inhibitory potency of CIP against BgATP4-associated ATPase activity was moderately reduced in mutant strains, with a 1.3- and 2.4-fold decrease in BgATP4L921V and BgATP4L921I, respectively, compared to that of BgATP4WT. An in silico investigation revealed reductions in affinity for CIP binding to BgATP4L921V and BgATP4L921I compared to BgATP4WT. Resistant strains showed no significant cross-resistance to atovaquone or tafenoquine succinate (TQ), with less than a onefold change in IC50 values. Combining CIP with TQ effectively eliminated B. microti infection in SCID mice with no relapse, and parasite DNA was not detected by qPCR within 90 days post-infection. Our findings reveal the efficacy of CIP as an antibabesial agent, its limitations as a monotherapy due to resistance development, and the potential of combination therapy with TQ to overcome said resistance and achieve complete parasite clearance.
Details
; Ji Shengwei 2
; Ariefta, Nanang R 1
; Galon Eloiza May S 3
; El-Sayed, Shimaa AES 4 ; Do, Thom 1 ; Jia Lijun 5 ; Sakaguchi Miako 6 ; Asada Masahito 1
; Nishikawa Yoshifumi 1
; Qin Xin 7
; Liu, Mingming 7
; Xuenan, Xuan 8
1 https://ror.org/02t9fsj94 National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture Veterinary Medicine Obihiro Japan
2 https://ror.org/02t9fsj94 National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture Veterinary Medicine Obihiro Japan, https://ror.org/039xnh269 Department of Veterinary Medicine, Agriculture College of Yanbian University Yanji China
3 https://ror.org/043say313 College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Cavite State University Indang Philippines
4 https://ror.org/02t9fsj94 National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture Veterinary Medicine Obihiro Japan, https://ror.org/01k8vtd75 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Mansoura University Mansoura Egypt
5 https://ror.org/039xnh269 Department of Veterinary Medicine, Agriculture College of Yanbian University Yanji China
6 https://ror.org/03ppx1p25 Central Laboratory, Institute of Tropical Medicine (NEKKEN), Nagasaki University Nagasaki Japan
7 https://ror.org/0212jcf64 School of Basic Medicine, Hubei University of Arts and Science Xiangyang China
8 https://ror.org/02t9fsj94 National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture Veterinary Medicine Obihiro Japan, https://ror.org/057zh3y96 Research Center for Asian Infectious Diseases, The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan