# Ascofuranone antibiotic is a promising trypanocidal drug for nagana

**Authors:** Keisuke Suganuma, Kennedy M. Mochabo, Judith K. Chemuliti, Kita Kiyoshi, Inoue Noboru, Shin-ichiro Kawazu

PMC · DOI: 10.4102/ojvr.v91i1.2115 · 2024-02-08

## TL;DR

This study shows that ascofuranone can effectively clear T. vivax in cattle, offering a potential new treatment for trypanosomosis in non-tsetse regions.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates ascofuranone's efficacy against T. vivax, suggesting its potential as a new trypanocidal drug.

## Key findings

- Ascofuranone successfully cleared T. vivax in treated calves.
- T. congolense was not effectively cleared by ascofuranone.
- The drug shows promise for use in non-tsetse regions like South America.

## Abstract

Trypanosomosis is a disease complex which affects both humans and animals in sub-Saharan Africa, transmitted by the tsetse fly and distributed within the tsetse belt of Africa. But some trypanosome species, for example, Trypanosoma brucei evansi, T. vivax, T. theileri and T. b. equiperdum are endemic outside the tsetse belt of Africa transmitted by biting flies, for example, Tabanus and Stomoxys, or venereal transmission, respectively. Trypanocidal drugs remain the principal method of animal trypanosomosis control in most African countries. However, there is a growing concern that their effectiveness may be severely curtailed by widespread drug resistance. A minimum number of six male cattle calves were recruited for the study. They were randomly grouped into two (T. vivax and T. congolense groups) of three calves each. One calf per group served as a control while two calves were treatment group. They were inoculated with 105 cells/mL parasites in phosphate buffered solution (PBS) in 2 mL. When parasitaemia reached 1 × 107.8 cells/mL trypanosomes per mL in calves, treatment was instituted with 20 mL (25 mg/kg in 100 kg calf) ascofuranone (AF) for treatment calves, while the control ones were administered a placebo (20 mL PBS) intramuscularly. This study revealed that T. vivax was successfully cleared by AF but the T. congolense group was not cleared effectively.

There is an urgent need to develop new drugs which this study sought to address. It is suggested that the AF compound can be developed further to be a sanative drug for T. vivax in non-tsetse infested areas like South Americas.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ascofuranone (PubChem CID 6434242)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** nagana (MESH:D014353), trypanocidal drug (MESH:D000081015), animal trypanosomosis (MESH:D000820)
- **Species:** Tabanus (genus) [taxon 7206], Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913], Glossina (tsetse flies, genus) [taxon 7393], Trypanosoma theileri (species) [taxon 67003], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Trypanosoma congolense (species) [taxon 5692], Diptera (flies, order) [taxon 7147]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11005941/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11005941