Historically, one of the key problems in neglected disease drug discovery has been identifying new and interesting chemotypes. Phenotypic screening of the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum has yielded almost 30,000 submicromolar hits in recent years. To make this collection more accessible, a collection of 400 chemotypes has been assembled, termed the Malaria Box. Half of these compounds were selected based on their drug-like properties and the others as molecular probes. These can now be requested as a pharmacological test set by malaria biologists, but importantly by groups working on related parasites, as part of a program to make both data and compounds readily available. In this paper, the analysis and selection methodology and characteristics of the compounds are described.
A variety of heterocyclic analogs of Win 54954 have been synthesized and tested in vitro against human rhinovirus type 14 (HRV-14) in a plaque reduction assay. The more active compounds were tested against 14 additional serotypes, and the concentration which inhibited 80% of the serotypes tested (MIC80) was measured. One compound, 37, exhibited activity comparable to Win 59454. Physicochemical as well as electrostatic parameters were calculated and the results subjected to a QSAR analysis in an effort to explain differences in activity observed between these compounds; however, no meaningful correlation with biological activity was found with any of these parameters.
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