Bansal Abhisheka, Ojo Kayode K, Mu Jianbing, Maly Dustin J, Van Voorhis Wesley C, Miller Louis H
Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, Maryland, USA
Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, and Center for Emerging and Re-emerging Infectious Diseases, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
mBio. 2016 Dec 6;7(6):e02011-16. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02011-16.
We used a sensitization approach that involves replacement of the gatekeeper residue in a protein kinase with one with a different side chain. The activity of the enzyme with a bulky gatekeeper residue, such as methionine, cannot be inhibited using bumped kinase inhibitors (BKIs). Here, we have used this approach to study Plasmodium falciparum calcium-dependent protein kinase 1 (PfCDPK1). The methionine gatekeeper substitution, T145M, although it led to a 47% reduction in transphosphorylation, was successfully introduced into the CDPK1 locus using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/Cas9. As methionine is a bulky residue, BKI 1294 had a 10-fold-greater effect in vitro on the wild-type enzyme than on the methionine mutant. However, in contrast to in vitro data with recombinant enzymes, BKI 1294 had a slightly greater inhibition of the growth of CDPK1 T145M parasites than the wild type. Moreover, the CDPK1 T145M parasites were more sensitive to the action of compound 2 (C2), a specific inhibitor of protein kinase G (PKG). These results suggest that a reduction in the activity of CDPK1 due to methionine substitution at the gatekeeper position is compensated through the direct action of PKG or of another kinase under the regulation of PKG. The transcript levels of CDPK5 and CDPK6 were significantly upregulated in the CDPK1 T145M parasites. The increase in CDPK6 or some other kinase may compensate for decrease in CDPK1 activity during invasion. This study suggests that targeting two kinases may be more effective in chemotherapy to treat malaria so as not to select for mutations in one of the enzymes.
Protein kinases of Plasmodium falciparum are being actively pursued as drug targets to treat malaria. However, compensatory mechanisms may reverse the drug activity against a kinase. In this study, we show that replacement of the wild-type threonine gatekeeper residue with methionine reduces the transphosphorylation activity of CDPK1. Mutant parasites with methionine gatekeeper residue compensate the reduced activity of CDPK1 through the action of PKG possibly by upregulation of CDPK6 or some other kinase. This study highlights that targeting one enzyme may lead to changes in transcript expression of other kinases that compensate for its function and may select for mutants that are less dependent on the target enzyme activity. Thus, inhibiting two kinases is a better strategy to protect the antimalarial activity of each, similar to artemisinin combination therapy or malarone (atovaquone and proguanil).
我们采用了一种致敏方法,该方法涉及将蛋白激酶中的守门残基替换为具有不同侧链的残基。含有庞大守门残基(如甲硫氨酸)的酶的活性,无法使用碰撞激酶抑制剂(BKI)进行抑制。在此,我们采用这种方法来研究恶性疟原虫钙依赖性蛋白激酶1(PfCDPK1)。甲硫氨酸守门残基替代,即T145M,尽管导致转磷酸化降低了47%,但使用成簇规律间隔短回文重复序列(CRISPR)/Cas9成功导入了CDPK1基因座。由于甲硫氨酸是一个庞大的残基,BKI 1294在体外对野生型酶的作用比对甲硫氨酸突变体的作用大10倍。然而,与重组酶的体外数据相反,BKI 1294对CDPK1 T145M寄生虫生长的抑制作用比对野生型的抑制作用略大。此外,CDPK1 T145M寄生虫对蛋白激酶G(PKG)的特异性抑制剂化合物2(C2)的作用更敏感。这些结果表明,由于守门位置的甲硫氨酸替代导致的CDPK1活性降低,通过PKG或PKG调控下的另一种激酶的直接作用得到了补偿。CDPK5和CDPK6的转录水平在CDPK1 T145M寄生虫中显著上调。CDPK6或其他一些激酶的增加可能补偿入侵过程中CDPK1活性的降低。这项研究表明,靶向两种激酶在疟疾化疗中可能更有效,以免选择其中一种酶的突变体。
恶性疟原虫的蛋白激酶正被积极作为治疗疟疾的药物靶点。然而,补偿机制可能会逆转针对一种激酶的药物活性。在本研究中,我们表明用甲硫氨酸替代野生型苏氨酸守门残基会降低CDPK1的转磷酸化活性。具有甲硫氨酸守门残基的突变寄生虫通过PKG的作用,可能通过上调CDPK6或其他一些激酶来补偿CDPK1降低的活性。这项研究强调,靶向一种酶可能会导致其他激酶的转录表达发生变化,从而补偿其功能,并可能选择对目标酶活性依赖性较小的突变体。因此,抑制两种激酶是保护每种药物抗疟活性的更好策略,类似于青蒿素联合疗法或马拉隆(阿托伐醌和氯胍)。