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Die Malaria und andere Infektionskrankheiten sind immer noch die Haupttodesursache in Entwicklungsländern. Durch das jahrzehntelange Versäumnis, neue Wirkstoffe zu entwickeln, und durch die rasante Ausbreitung von Resistenzen gegen herkömmliche Medikamente sind in vielen Regionen der Erde besorgniserregende Zahlen über Neuinfektionen und Todesfälle zu beobachten. Die Suche nach neuen Wirkstoffen ist daher dringend erforderlich und die Hauptaufgabe des Sonderforschungsbereichs 630 an der Universität Würzburg. An diesem interdisziplinären Projekt beteiligt sich unsere Forschungsgruppe vor allem mit der Naturstoffklasse der Naphthylisochinolin-Alkaloide. Neben ihren interessanten strukturellen Eigenschaften haben mehrere Vertreter dieser Sekundärmetabolite vielversprechende Aktivitäten gegen Plasmodien, Leishmanien und Trypanosomen. Dioncophyllin C (24), das bisher wirksamste Naphthylisochinolin gegen P. falciparum, zeigt nicht nur eine exzellente Aktivität in vitro, sondern auch in vivo. In Kooperation mit der Forschergruppe von K. Baumann (Braunschweig) führte man QSAR-Studien durch, um die für die biologische Wirkung entscheidenden Strukturmerkmale zu identifizieren und neue vereinfachte Analoga der Leistruktur 24 vorzuschlagen. Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war aufbauend auf Vorarbeiten in unserer Gruppe die Darstellung von strukturell vereinfachten Derivaten des Naturstoffs 24. Die Ergebnisse der biologischen Untersuchungen sollten ausgewertet und somit neue Struktur-Wirkungs-Beziehungen aufgestellt werden. Weiterhin sollten auch Chinolinium-Salze, die man als Analoga der N,C-verknüpften Naphthylisochinoline ansehen kann, synthetisiert werden und innerhalb des SFB 630 und bei unseren Partnern am Schweizerischen Tropen- und Public-Health-Institut auf ihre biologische Aktivität untersucht werden. Man erhoffte sich neben möglichen antiinfektiven Eigenschaften auch Rückschlüsse auf Struktur-Wirkungs-Beziehungen. Zusätzlich sollte die synthetische und analytische chemische Expertise unseren Kooperationspartnern in zwei Projekten außerhalb des SFB 630 zur Verfügung gestellt werden. Dabei handelte es sich einerseits um die Strukturaufklärung von Biosyntheseintermediaten mit Hilfe der HPLC-NMR-Kopplung und andererseits um die Darstellung langkettiger Aldehyde für die biologische Untersuchung des Prä-Penetrationsprozesses eines getreideschädigenden Pilzes.
BACKGROUND: Climate change will probably alter the spread and transmission intensity of malaria in Africa. OBJECTIVES: In this study, we assessed potential changes in the malaria transmission via an integrated weather disease model.
METHODS: We simulated mosquito biting rates using the Liverpool Malaria Model (LMM). The input data for the LMM were bias-corrected temperature and precipitation data from the regional model (REMO) on a 0.5 degrees latitude longitude grid. A Plasmodium falciparum infection model expands the LMM simulations to incorporate information on the infection rate among children. Malaria projections were carried out with this integrated weather disease model for 2001 to 2050 according to two climate scenarios that include the effect of anthropogenic land-use and land-cover changes on climate.
RESULTS: Model-based estimates for the present climate (1960 to 2000) are consistent with observed data for the spread of malaria in Africa. In the model domain, the regions where malaria is epidemic are located in the Sahel as well as in various highland territories. A decreased spread of malaria over most parts of tropical Africa is projected because of simulated increased surface temperatures and a significant reduction in annual rainfall. However, the likelihood of malaria epidemics is projected to increase in the southern part of the Sahel. In most of East Africa, the intensity of malaria transmission is expected to increase. Projections indicate that highland areas that were formerly unsuitable for malaria will become epidemic, whereas in the lower-altitude regions of the East African highlands, epidemic risk will decrease.
CONCLUSIONS: We project that climate changes driven by greenhouse-gas and land-use changes will significantly affect the spread of malaria in tropical Africa well before 2050. The geographic distribution of areas where malaria is epidemic might have to be significantly altered in the coming decades.
The sexual phase of Plasmodium falciparum begins with the differentiation of intraerythrocytic sexual stages, termed gametocytes, in the human host. Mature gametocytes circulate in the peripheral blood and are taken up by the mosquito during the blood meal. These stages are essential for the spread of the malaria disease and form gametes in the mosquito midgut within minutes. A highly conserved family of six secreted proteins has been identified in Plasmodium falciparum. They comprise multiple adhesive domains and are termed PfCCp1 through PfCCp5, and PfFNPA. It was revealed in this work that PfCCp multi-domain adhesion proteins form protein complexes in gametocytes and on the surface of newly emerged macrogametes by adhesion domain-mediated binding. Co-Immunoprecipitation assays with activated gametocyte lysates show interactions between PfCCp proteins and indicate surface association via Pfs230 and Pfs25. Pfs230 is connected with the plasma membrane of the parasite by its interaction partner Pfs48/45. This protein is linked to the plasma membrane by a GPI anchor and presumably retains the multi-protein complex on the surface of newly emerged macrogametes in the mosquito midgut. A WD40 domain containing protein was identified to be part of this protein complex. It might serve as platform for the assembly of the multi protein complex or mediate the interplay among proteins, as suggested from known functions of the WD40 domain repeats. During egress from the host erythrocyte, the emerging gametes become vulnerable to factors of the human complement, which is taken up with the blood meal. In this thesis it was found that the complement system is active for about one hour post feeding. Macrogametes defend against complement-mediated lysis by co-opting the human complement regulators Factor H and FHL-1 from the blood-meal. These serum proteins bind via its SCR domains 5-7 to the surface of macrogametes. Once bound, they trigger complement inactivation of the alternative pathway, which prevents induction of complement lysis on the surface of the malaria parasite. Antibodies against Factor H are able to impair the sexual development in vitro and are able to block transmission to the mosquito. Interaction studies on endogenous proteins and immobilized recombinant proteins revealed the PfGAP50 protein as binding partner of Factor H and FHL-1. This protein was hitherto described as a glideosome-associated protein in invasive parasite stages, but has not yet been characterized in gametes. First localization studies indicate a relocation of PfGAP50 from the inner membrane complex to the surface of macrogametes. Malaria still persists as one of the deadliest infectious diseases worldwide. Investigations on the essential transmissive stages, gametocytes and gametes of Plasmodium falciparum, stood in the background of research for a long time. This work deciphered details on protein interactions on the surface of the malaria parasite and provides first information about coactions between the parasite and the human complement in the mosquito midgut.
BACKGROUND: In the face of growing resistance in malaria parasites to drugs, pharmacological combination therapies are important. There is accumulating evidence that methylene blue (MB) is an effective drug against malaria. Here we explore the biological effects of both MB alone and in combination therapy using modeling and experimental data.
RESULTS: We built a model of the central metabolic pathways in P. falciparum. Metabolic flux modes and their changes under MB were calculated by integrating experimental data (RT-PCR data on mRNAs for redox enzymes) as constraints and results from the YANA software package for metabolic pathway calculations. Several different lines of MB attack on Plasmodium redox defense were identified by analysis of the network effects. Next, chloroquine resistance based on pfmdr/and pfcrt transporters, as well as pyrimethamine/sulfadoxine resistance (by mutations in DHF/DHPS), were modeled in silico. Further modeling shows that MB has a favorable synergism on antimalarial network effects with these commonly used antimalarial drugs.
CONCLUSIONS: Theoretical and experimental results support that methylene blue should, because of its resistance-breaking potential, be further tested as a key component in drug combination therapy efforts in holoendemic areas.