L-651,582 inhibition of intracellular parasitic protozoal growth correlates with host-cell directed effects.
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L-651,582 (5-amino-[4-(4-chlorobenzoyl)-3,5-dichlorobenzyl]-1,2,3-triazole-4- carboxamide), which is active in vivo against coccidiosis caused by the intracellular parasitic protozoan Eimeria tenella, is also effective against this organism in tissue culture in Maden Darby bovine kidney (MDBK) host cells. L-651,582 inhibited 45Ca++ uptake, as well as [3H]hypoxanthine incorporation into soluble nucleotide pools, in MDBK cells at concentrations similar to those required for antiparasitic activity (IC50 = 0.3 microgram/ml). However, the drug did not inhibit the [3H] hypoxanthine incorporation into the nucleotide pools of the intracellular E. tenella under the same conditions. The antiparasitic activity of several L-651,582 analogs paralleled their ability to inhibit [3H]hypoxanthine incorporation in MDBK cells. L-651,582 similarly inhibited the growth of the intracellular parasitic protozoan Toxoplasma gondii in vitro with either HeLa cells or Normal Human Fibroblasts as host cells. The IC50 for inhibition of T. gondii growth in normal human fibroblasts was similar to that for [3H]hypoxanthine incorporation inhibition. In HeLa cells, however, 40-fold higher levels were required for the inhibition of [3H]hypoxanthine incorporation than were required to inhibit parasite growth, showing that antiparasitic activity was not a consequence of the alteration in host nucleotide metabolism. This was also consistent with the observation that the effect of L-651,582 against E. tenella in MDBK cells was not reversed by the addition of nutrients involved in nucleotide biosynthesis. This study suggests that L-651,582 has antiparasitic activity which correlates with host cell effects and which may be a result of blocking Ca++ entry in the host cells, but is not the result of an alteration of host nucleotide biosynthesis.