The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia; Department of Medical Biology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia.
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia; Department of Medical Biology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia.
Int J Parasitol Drugs Drug Resist. 2020 Dec;14:188-200. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpddr.2020.10.008. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
The P. falciparum parasite, responsible for the disease in humans known as malaria, must invade erythrocytes to provide an environment for self-replication and survival. For invasion to occur, the parasite must engage several ligands on the host erythrocyte surface to enable adhesion, tight junction formation and entry. Critical interactions include binding of erythrocyte binding-like ligands and reticulocyte binding-like homologues (Rhs) to the surface of the host erythrocyte. The reticulocyte binding-like homologue 5 (Rh5) is the only member of this family that is essential for invasion and it binds to the basigin host receptor. The essential nature of Rh5 makes it an important vaccine target, however to date, Rh5 has not been targeted by small molecule intervention. Here, we describe the development of a high-throughput screening assay to identify small molecules which interfere with the Rh5-basigin interaction. To validate the utility of this assay we screened a known drug library and the Medicines for Malaria Box and demonstrated the reproducibility and robustness of the assay for high-throughput screening purposes. The screen of the known drug library identified the known leukotriene antagonist, pranlukast. We used pranlukast as a model inhibitor in a post screening evaluation cascade. We procured and synthesised analogues of pranlukast to assist in the hit confirmation process and show which structural moieties of pranlukast attenuate the Rh5 - basigin interaction. Evaluation of pranlukast analogues against P. falciparum in a viability assay and a schizont rupture assay show the parasite activity was not consistent with the biochemical inhibition of Rh5, questioning the developability of pranlukast as an antimalarial. The high-throughput assay developed from this work has the capacity to screen large collections of small molecules to discover inhibitors of P. falciparum Rh5 for future development of invasion inhibitory antimalarials.
恶性疟原虫寄生虫是导致人类疟疾的病原体,它必须侵入红细胞才能提供自我复制和生存的环境。为了入侵,寄生虫必须与宿主红细胞表面的几种配体结合,以实现黏附、紧密连接形成和进入。关键相互作用包括红细胞结合样配体和网织红细胞结合样同源物(Rhs)与宿主红细胞表面的结合。Reticulocyte Binding-like Homologue 5(Rh5)是该家族中唯一对入侵必不可少的成员,它与宿主受体 basigin 结合。Rh5 的重要性使其成为一个重要的疫苗靶点,但迄今为止,Rh5 尚未成为小分子干预的目标。在这里,我们描述了一种高通量筛选方法的开发,以鉴定干扰 Rh5-basigin 相互作用的小分子。为了验证该测定法的实用性,我们筛选了一个已知的药物库和抗疟疾药物库,并证明了该测定法在高通量筛选中的可重复性和稳健性。已知药物库的筛选鉴定了已知的白三烯拮抗剂普拉曲沙。我们使用普拉曲沙作为后续筛选评估级联中的模型抑制剂。我们采购并合成了普拉曲沙的类似物,以协助确认命中过程,并显示普拉曲沙的哪些结构部分减弱了 Rh5-basigin 相互作用。普拉曲沙类似物在疟原虫活力测定和裂殖体破裂测定中的评估表明,寄生虫活性与 Rh5 的生化抑制不一致,这对普拉曲沙作为抗疟药物的开发提出了质疑。从这项工作中开发的高通量测定法具有筛选大量小分子文库以发现恶性疟原虫 Rh5 抑制剂的能力,用于未来开发抑制入侵的抗疟药物。