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Repurposing the orphan drug nitisinone to control the transmission of African trypanosomiasis
Authors:Marcos Sterkel  Lee R Haines  Aitor Casas-Snchez  Vincent Owino Adung&#x;a  Raquel J Vionette-Amaral  Shannon Quek  Clair Rose  Mariana Silva dos Santos  Natalia García Escude  Hanafy M Ismail  Mark I Paine  Seth M Barribeau  Simon Wagstaff  James I MacRae  Daniel Masiga  Laith Yakob  Pedro L Oliveira   lvaro Acosta-Serrano
Abstract:Tsetse transmit African trypanosomiasis, which is a disease fatal to both humans and animals. A vaccine to protect against this disease does not exist so transmission control relies on eliminating tsetse populations. Although neurotoxic insecticides are the gold standard for insect control, they negatively impact the environment and reduce populations of insect pollinator species. Here we present a promising, environment-friendly alternative to current insecticides that targets the insect tyrosine metabolism pathway. A bloodmeal contains high levels of tyrosine, which is toxic to haematophagous insects if it is not degraded and eliminated. RNA interference (RNAi) of either the first two enzymes in the tyrosine degradation pathway (tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT) and 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)) was lethal to tsetse. Furthermore, nitisinone (NTBC), an FDA-approved tyrosine catabolism inhibitor, killed tsetse regardless if the drug was orally or topically applied. However, oral administration of NTBC to bumblebees did not affect their survival. Using a novel mathematical model, we show that NTBC could reduce the transmission of African trypanosomiasis in sub-Saharan Africa, thus accelerating current disease elimination programmes.

This study shows that tsetse flies, vectors of African trypanosomiasis, are highly susceptible to killing by nitisinone, a tyrosine catabolism inhibitor currently used to treat human metabolic diseases; this environment-friendly drug could facilitate elimination of African trypanosomiasis and other diseases transmitted by blood feeding insects.
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