Sulfonylpiperazine compounds prevent Plasmodium falciparum invasion of red blood cells through interference with actin-1/profilin dynamics
Dans, Madeline G.; Piirainen, Henni; Nguyen, William; Khurana, Sachin; Mehra, Somya; Razook, Zahra; Geoghegan, Niall D.; Dawson, Aurelie T.; Das, Sujaan; Schneider, Molly Parkyn; Jonsdottir, Thorey K.; Gabriela, Mikha; Gancheva, Maria R.; Tonkin, Christopher J.; Mollard, Vanessa; Goodman, Christopher Dean; McFadden, Geoffrey I.; Wilson, Danny W.; Rogers, Kelly L.; Barry, Alyssa E.; Crabb, Brendan S.; de Koning-Ward, Tania F.; Sleebs, Brad E.; Kursula, Inari Talvikki; Gilson, Paul R.
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Published version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3147584Utgivelsesdato
2023Metadata
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- Department of Biomedicine [743]
- Registrations from Cristin [10482]
Sammendrag
With emerging resistance to frontline treatments, it is vital that new antimalarial drugs are identified to target Plasmodium falciparum. We have recently described a compound, MMV020291, as a specific inhibitor of red blood cell (RBC) invasion, and have generated analogues with improved potency. Here, we generated resistance to MMV020291 and performed whole genome sequencing of 3 MMV020291-resistant populations. This revealed 3 nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms in 2 genes; 2 in profilin (N154Y, K124N) and a third one in actin-1 (M356L). Using CRISPR-Cas9, we engineered these mutations into wild-type parasites, which rendered them resistant to MMV020291. We demonstrate that MMV020291 reduces actin polymerisation that is required by the merozoite stage parasites to invade RBCs. Additionally, the series inhibits the actin-1-dependent process of apicoplast segregation, leading to a delayed death phenotype. In vitro cosedimentation experiments using recombinant P. falciparum proteins indicate that potent MMV020291 analogues disrupt the formation of filamentous actin in the presence of profilin. Altogether, this study identifies the first compound series interfering with the actin-1/profilin interaction in P. falciparum and paves the way for future antimalarial development against the highly dynamic process of actin polymerisation.