Abstract
Abstract
Background
Malaria is a parasitic disease that produces significant infection in red blood cells. The objective of this study is to investigate the relationships between factors affecting the penetration of currently available anti-malarials into red blood cells.
Methods
Fifteen anti-malarial drugs listed in the third edition of the World Health Organization malaria treatment guidelines were enrolled in the study. Relationship analysis began with the prioritization of the physicochemical properties of the anti-malarials to create a multivariate linear regression model that correlates the red blood cell penetration.
Results
It was found that protein binding was significantly correlated with red blood cell penetration, with a negative coefficient. The next step was repeated analysis to find molecular descriptors that influence protein binding. The coefficients of the number of rotating bonds and the number of aliphatic hydrocarbons are negative, as opposed to the positive coefficients of the number of hydrogen bonds and the number of aromatic hydrocarbons. The p-value was less than 0.05.
Conclusions
Anti-malarials with a small number of hydrogen bonds and aromatic hydrocarbons, together with a high number of rotatable bonds and aliphatic hydrocarbons, may have a higher tendency to penetrate the red blood cells.
Funder
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chulalongkorn University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Parasitology
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