Issue 34, 2016

Mono- and multimeric ferrocene congeners of quinoline-based polyamines as potential antiparasitics

Abstract

A series of mono- and multimeric polyamine-containing ferrocenyl complexes containing a quinoline motif were prepared. The complexes were characterised by standard techniques. The molecular structure of the monomeric salicylaldimine derivative was elucidated using single crystal X-ray diffraction and was consistent with the proposed structure. The antiplasmodial activity of the compounds were evaluated in vitro against both the NF54 (chloroquine-sensitive) and K1 (chloroquine-resistant) strains of Plasmodium falciparum. The polyamine derivatives exhibit good resistance index values suggesting that these systems are beneficial in overcoming the resistance experienced by chloroquine. Mechanistic studies suggest that haemozoin formation may be the target of these quinoline complexes in the parasite. Some of the complexes exhibit moderate to high cytotoxicity against WHCO1 oesophageal cancer cells in vitro. The monomeric ferrocenyl-amine complexes exhibit potent activity against this particular cell line. The complexes were also screened against the G3 strain of Trichomonas vaginalis and the salicylaldimine complexes demonstrated promising activity at the tested concentration. All of these compounds show no inhibitory effect on several common normal flora bacteria, indicative of their selectivity for eukaryotic pathogens and cancer.

Graphical abstract: Mono- and multimeric ferrocene congeners of quinoline-based polyamines as potential antiparasitics

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Jul 2016
Accepted
26 Jul 2016
First published
03 Aug 2016
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Dalton Trans., 2016,45, 13415-13426

Mono- and multimeric ferrocene congeners of quinoline-based polyamines as potential antiparasitics

T. Stringer, C. De Kock, H. Guzgay, J. Okombo, J. Liu, S. Kanetake, J. Kim, C. Tam, L. W. Cheng, P. J. Smith, D. T. Hendricks, K. M. Land, T. J. Egan and G. S. Smith, Dalton Trans., 2016, 45, 13415 DOI: 10.1039/C6DT02685K

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