A mechanism for the synergistic antimalarial action of atovaquone and proguanil

IK Srivastava, AB Vaidya - Antimicrobial agents and …, 1999 - Am Soc Microbiol
IK Srivastava, AB Vaidya
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 1999Am Soc Microbiol
ABSTRACT A combination of atovaquone and proguanil has been found to be quite
effective in treating malaria, with little evidence of the emergence of resistance when
atovaquone was used as a single agent. We have examined possible mechanisms for the
synergy between these two drugs. While proguanil by itself had no effect on electron
transport or mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ m), it significantly enhanced the ability of
atovaquone to collapse ΔΨ m when used in combination. This enhancement was observed …
Abstract
A combination of atovaquone and proguanil has been found to be quite effective in treating malaria, with little evidence of the emergence of resistance when atovaquone was used as a single agent. We have examined possible mechanisms for the synergy between these two drugs. While proguanil by itself had no effect on electron transport or mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), it significantly enhanced the ability of atovaquone to collapse ΔΨm when used in combination. This enhancement was observed at pharmacologically achievable doses. Proguanil acted as a biguanide rather than as its metabolite cycloguanil (a parasite dihydrofolate reductase [DHFR] inhibitor) to enhance the atovaquone effect; another DHFR inhibitor, pyrimethamine, also had no enhancing effect. Proguanil-mediated enhancement was specific for atovaquone, since the effects of other mitochondrial electron transport inhibitors, such as myxothiazole and antimycin, were not altered by inclusion of proguanil. Surprisingly, proguanil did not enhance the ability of atovaquone to inhibit mitochondrial electron transport in malaria parasites. These results suggest that proguanil in its prodrug form acts in synergy with atovaquone by lowering the effective concentration at which atovaquone collapses ΔΨm in malaria parasites. This could explain the paradoxical success of the atovaquone-proguanil combination even in regions where proguanil alone is ineffective due to resistance. The results also suggest that the atovaquone-proguanil combination may act as a site-specific uncoupler of parasite mitochondria in a selective manner.
American Society for Microbiology