2022
Babesia duncani as a Model Organism to Study the Development, Virulence, and Drug Susceptibility of Intraerythrocytic Parasites In Vitro and In Vivo
Pal AC, Renard I, Singh P, Vydyam P, Chiu JE, Pou S, Winter RW, Dodean R, Frueh L, Nilsen AC, Riscoe MK, Doggett JS, Mamoun C. Babesia duncani as a Model Organism to Study the Development, Virulence, and Drug Susceptibility of Intraerythrocytic Parasites In Vitro and In Vivo. The Journal Of Infectious Diseases 2022, 226: 1267-1275. PMID: 35512141, PMCID: PMC10233494, DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiac181.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAnimalsAtovaquoneBabesiaHumansMiceMice, Inbred C3HParasitesProdrugsQuinolonesTicksVirulenceConceptsLethal infectionC3H/HeJ miceMalaria-like illnessB. duncaniMouse genetic backgroundSurvival outcomesHeJ miceSevere diseaseBabesia duncaniMouse modelDifferent mouse genetic backgroundsDrug susceptibilityBabesia microtiHuman babesiosisIntraerythrocytic parasitesUnique pathogenParasite loadMiceSpecies of BabesiaApicomplexa phylumInfectionBabesia parasitesFree merozoitesHuman erythrocytesGenetic background
2021
Effective Therapy Targeting Cytochrome bc1 Prevents Babesia Erythrocytic Development and Protects from Lethal Infection
Chiu JE, Renard I, Pal AC, Singh P, Vydyam P, Thekkiniath J, Kumar M, Gihaz S, Pou S, Winter RW, Dodean R, Frueh L, Nilsen AC, Riscoe MK, Doggett JS, Mamoun C. Effective Therapy Targeting Cytochrome bc1 Prevents Babesia Erythrocytic Development and Protects from Lethal Infection. Antimicrobial Agents And Chemotherapy 2021, 65: 10.1128/aac.00662-21. PMID: 34152821, PMCID: PMC8370247, DOI: 10.1128/aac.00662-21.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEndochin-like quinolonesLethal infectionBlood-borne diseasesBlood-borne pathogensEffective therapyRelated apicomplexan parasitesExperimental therapiesLow doseMouse modelInfectious agentsHuman infectionsInfectionClinical candidatesStrong efficacyB. microtiExcellent safetyMode of actionTherapyErythrocytic developmentAtovaquoneEfficacyApicomplexan parasitesSafetyStructure-activity relationshipsParasitemia