Guanidines: Privileged Scaffolds Against Neglected Tropical Diseases: A Review
Dos Anjos LR, de Araújo RSA, Dos Reis MML, Costa NCS, Bernardo VG, Zampieri EH, Rodrigues KADF, Cilli EM, et al. (10 authors)
Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) · 2026-05
Abstract
Background: Neglected diseases caused by protozoan parasites remain a major public health burden, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Among the chemical motifs explored in antiparasitic drug discovery, guanidine-containing compounds have attracted considerable attention due to their strong cationic character, high capacity for hydrogen bonding, and versatility in interacting with biological targets. Methodology: This review summarizes advances reported in the last decade regarding guanidine derivatives with activity against pathogens associated with Chagas disease, human African trypanosomiasis, Leishmaniasis, tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis, dengue and schistosomiasis. Results: Evidence gathered from synthetic, natural, and drug-repurposing studies indicates that the guanidine, guanidine-containing and guanidine-related compounds contribute to modulating biological activity by changing electrostatic interactions, hydrogen-bonding networks, and physicochemical properties, with enzymes, nucleic acids, and membrane-associated targets essential for parasite survival. Across the analyzed studies, several emerging structure-activity relationship trends were identified, including the contribution of polycationic or dicationic architectures, the influence of halogenated or lipophilic substituents, and the dependence of biological activity on the complete molecular framework, including heterocyclic systems, macrocycles, peptide conjugates, hybrid scaffolds, and repurposed drugs. In addition to direct antiparasitic effects, certain guanidine-containing and guanidine-related compounds demonstrate immunomodulatory or host-protective properties, expanding the therapeutic relevance of this class. Despite promising in vitro results, protonation trapping, efflux pump susceptibility, and pharmacokinetic limitations such as poor oral absorption, high polarity, plasma protein binding and limited membrane permeability remain significant challenges for clinical translation. Nonetheless, the integration of medicinal chemistry, computational modeling, and biological screening continues to accelerate the identification of optimized scaffolds. Conclusions: Overall, guanidine-based compounds constitute a promising scaffold for the development of new therapeutic strategies targeting neglected parasitic diseases, and further structural optimization may enable the emergence of candidates with improved efficacy, selectivity, and drug-like properties.