Sweeney Joseph M, Willis Ian M, Akabas Myles H
Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA.
Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA.
Int J Parasitol Drugs Drug Resist. 2024 Dec;26:100567. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpddr.2024.100567. Epub 2024 Oct 13.
Malaria affects almost 250 million people annually and continues to be a significant threat to global public health. Infection with protozoan parasites from the genus Plasmodium causes malaria. The primary treatment for malaria is artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). The spread of ACT-resistant parasites has undermined efforts to control and eradicate malaria. Thus, it is crucial to identify new targets for the development of novel antimalarial drugs. Phosphate is an essential nutrient for all cells. The Plasmodium falciparum genome encodes a single sodium-coupled inorganic phosphate transporter named PfPiT that is essential for parasite proliferation in the asexual blood stage. Thus, PfPiT inhibitors may be promising antimalarial drugs. Like Plasmodium, yeast requires phosphate to grow. We developed a Saccharomyces cerevisiae based growth assay to identify inhibitors of PfPiT. Genome editing was used to create a yeast strain where PfPiT was the only phosphate transporter. Using a radioactive [P]phosphate uptake assay, the measured phosphate K for PfPiT in yeast was 56 ± 7 μM in 1 mM NaCl at pH 7.4. The K decreased to 24 ± 3 μM in 25 mM NaCl consistent with it being a Na coupled cotransporter. Conditions under which yeast growth was dependent on phosphate uptake mediated by PfPiT were identified and a 22-h growth assay was developed to screen for PfPiT inhibitors. In a screen of 21 compounds, two compounds were identified that inhibited the growth of the PfPiT strain but not that of the parental strain expressing Pho84, one of the five endogenous yeast phosphate transporters. Radioactive phosphate uptake experiments confirmed inhibition of phosphate uptake by the two compounds. The growth inhibition assay provides a simple and inexpensive approach to screen a large compound library for PfPiT inhibitors that may serve as starting points for the development of novel antimalarial drugs.
疟疾每年影响近2.5亿人,仍然是对全球公共卫生的重大威胁。感染疟原虫属的原生动物寄生虫会导致疟疾。疟疾的主要治疗方法是基于青蒿素的联合疗法(ACTs)。对ACT耐药的寄生虫的传播破坏了控制和根除疟疾的努力。因此,确定新型抗疟药物开发的新靶点至关重要。磷酸盐是所有细胞必需的营养物质。恶性疟原虫基因组编码一种名为PfPiT的单一钠偶联无机磷酸盐转运蛋白,它对于疟原虫在无性血液阶段的增殖至关重要。因此,PfPiT抑制剂可能是有前景的抗疟药物。与疟原虫一样,酵母生长也需要磷酸盐。我们开发了一种基于酿酒酵母的生长试验来鉴定PfPiT的抑制剂。利用基因组编辑创建了一个酵母菌株,其中PfPiT是唯一的磷酸盐转运蛋白。使用放射性[P]磷酸盐摄取试验,在pH 7.4的1 mM NaCl中,酵母中PfPiT的测得磷酸盐K为56±7 μM。在25 mM NaCl中,K降至24±3 μM,这与其作为钠偶联共转运蛋白一致。确定了酵母生长依赖于PfPiT介导的磷酸盐摄取的条件,并开发了一种22小时生长试验来筛选PfPiT抑制剂。在对21种化合物的筛选中,鉴定出两种化合物,它们抑制PfPiT菌株的生长,但不抑制表达五种内源性酵母磷酸盐转运蛋白之一的Pho84的亲本菌株的生长。放射性磷酸盐摄取实验证实了这两种化合物对磷酸盐摄取的抑制作用。生长抑制试验提供了一种简单且廉价的方法,用于筛选大型化合物库以寻找PfPiT抑制剂,这些抑制剂可能作为新型抗疟药物开发的起点。