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Quinoxaline-based anti-schistosomal compounds have potent anti-plasmodial activity
M. Rawat, G. Padalino, E. Adika, J. Okombo, T. Yeo, A. Brancale, DA. Fidock, KF. Hoffmann, MCS. Lee
Language English Country United States
Document type Journal Article
Grant support
Wellcome Trust - United Kingdom
R01 AI109023
NIAID NIH HHS - United States
R01 AI124678
NIAID NIH HHS - United States
R01 AI185559
NIAID NIH HHS - United States
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- MeSH
- Antimalarials * pharmacology MeSH
- Quinoxalines * pharmacology MeSH
- Drug Resistance drug effects MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Plasmodium falciparum * drug effects MeSH
- Protozoan Proteins metabolism genetics MeSH
- Schistosoma drug effects MeSH
- Schistosomiasis drug therapy MeSH
- Malaria, Falciparum drug therapy parasitology MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
The human pathogens Plasmodium and Schistosoma are each responsible for over 200 million infections annually, especially in low- and middle-income countries. There is a pressing need for new drug targets for these diseases, driven by emergence of drug-resistance in Plasmodium and an overall dearth of drug targets against Schistosoma. Here, we explored the opportunity for pathogen-hopping by evaluating a series of quinoxaline-based anti-schistosomal compounds for their activity against P. falciparum. We identified compounds with low nanomolar potency against 3D7 and multidrug-resistant strains. In vitro resistance selections using wildtype and mutator P. falciparum lines revealed a low propensity for resistance. Only one of the series, compound 22, yielded resistance mutations, including point mutations in a non-essential putative hydrolase pfqrp1, as well as copy number amplification of a phospholipid-translocating ATPase, pfatp2, a potential target. Notably, independently generated CRISPR-edited mutants in pfqrp1 also showed resistance to compound 22 and a related analogue. Moreover, previous lines with pfatp2 copy number variations were similarly less susceptible to challenge with the new compounds. Finally, we examined whether the predicted hydrolase activity of PfQRP1 underlies its mechanism of resistance, showing that both mutation of the putative catalytic triad and a more severe loss of function mutation elicited resistance. Collectively, we describe a compound series with potent activity against two important pathogens and their potential target in P. falciparum.
Department of Life Sciences Aberystwyth University Aberystwyth United Kingdom
Department of Organic Chemistry University of Chemistry and Technology Prague Prague Czech Republic
Swansea University Medical School Swansea United Kingdom
Wellcome Sanger Institute Wellcome Genome Campus Hinxton United Kingdom
References provided by Crossref.org
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