Prudhomme Jacques, McDaniel Eric, Ponts Nadia, Bertani Stéphane, Fenical William, Jensen Paul, Le Roch Karine
Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, University of California Riverside, Riverside, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2008 Jun 4;3(6):e2335. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002335.
Malaria continues to be a devastating parasitic disease that causes the death of 2 million individuals annually. The increase in multi-drug resistance together with the absence of an efficient vaccine hastens the need for speedy and comprehensive antimalarial drug discovery and development. Throughout history, traditional herbal remedies or natural products have been a reliable source of antimalarial agents, e.g. quinine and artemisinin. Today, one emerging source of small molecule drug leads is the world's oceans. Included among the source of marine natural products are marine microorganisms such as the recently described actinomycete. Members of the genus Salinispora have yielded a wealth of new secondary metabolites including salinosporamide A, a molecule currently advancing through clinical trials as an anticancer agent. Because of the biological activity of metabolites being isolated from marine microorganisms, our group became interested in exploring the potential efficacy of these compounds against the malaria parasite.
We screened 80 bacterial crude extracts for their activity against malaria growth. We established that the pure compound, salinosporamide A, produced by the marine actinomycete, Salinispora tropica, shows strong inhibitory activity against the erythrocytic stages of the parasite cycle. Biochemical experiments support the likely inhibition of the parasite 20S proteasome. Crystal structure modeling of salinosporamide A and the parasite catalytic 20S subunit further confirm this hypothesis. Ultimately we showed that salinosporamide A protected mice against deadly malaria infection when administered at an extremely low dosage.
These findings underline the potential of secondary metabolites, derived from marine microorganisms, to inhibit Plasmodium growth. More specifically, we highlight the effect of proteasome inhibitors such as salinosporamide A on in vitro and in vivo parasite development. Salinosporamide A (NPI-0052) now being advanced to phase I trials for the treatment of refractory multiple myeloma will need to be further explored to evaluate the safety profile for its use against malaria.
疟疾仍然是一种极具破坏性的寄生虫病,每年导致200万人死亡。多重耐药性的增加以及缺乏有效的疫苗,加速了快速全面发现和开发抗疟药物的需求。纵观历史,传统草药或天然产物一直是抗疟药物的可靠来源,例如奎宁和青蒿素。如今,小分子药物先导物的一个新兴来源是世界海洋。海洋天然产物的来源包括海洋微生物,如最近描述的放线菌。盐孢菌属的成员产生了大量新的次生代谢产物,包括盐孢酰胺A,该分子目前作为一种抗癌药物正在进行临床试验。由于从海洋微生物中分离出的代谢产物具有生物活性,我们团队对探索这些化合物对疟原虫的潜在疗效产生了兴趣。
我们筛选了80种细菌粗提物对疟疾生长的活性。我们确定,由海洋放线菌热带盐孢菌产生的纯化合物盐孢酰胺A对疟原虫周期的红细胞阶段显示出强烈的抑制活性。生化实验支持了对寄生虫20S蛋白酶体的可能抑制作用。盐孢酰胺A与寄生虫催化性20S亚基的晶体结构建模进一步证实了这一假设。最终我们表明,盐孢酰胺A以极低剂量给药时可保护小鼠免受致命的疟疾感染。
这些发现强调了源自海洋微生物的次生代谢产物抑制疟原虫生长的潜力。更具体地说,我们强调了蛋白酶体抑制剂如盐孢酰胺A对体外和体内寄生虫发育的影响。目前正在推进用于治疗难治性多发性骨髓瘤的I期试验的盐孢酰胺A(NPI - 0052),需要进一步探索以评估其用于抗疟的安全性。