4.5 Article

Identification of first-in-class plasmodium OTU inhibitors with potent anti-malarial activity

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 478, Issue 18, Pages 3445-3466

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20210481

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) ARDEB 1001program [215Z069]
  2. Medicine for Malaria Venture MMV Pathogenbox Award (Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)
  3. EU COFUND of the 7th. Framework Programme (FP7) [115C039]
  4. TUBITAK [215Z069, 115S185, 215Z071, 216S317]
  5. ICGEB 2015 Early Career Return Grant [CRP/TUR15-02_EC]
  6. Gilead Sciences International Hematology & Oncology program
  7. Gilead ile Hayat Bulan Fikirler, ERA-Net CVD program [118S929]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Plasmodium OTU-like proteins share highly conserved structures with viral OTU proteins and demonstrate Ubiquitin and ISG15 deconjugation activities. Through screening a library of small molecules, two potent inhibitors were identified with strong anti-malarial activity against P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. yoelii OTU proteins.
OTU proteases antagonize the cellular defense in the host cells and involve in pathogenesis. Intriguingly, P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. yoelii have an uncharacterized and highly conserved viral OTU-like proteins. However, their structure, function or inhibitors have not been previously reported. To this end, we have performed structural modeling, small molecule screening, deconjugation assays to characterize and develop first-in-class inhibitors of P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. yoelii OTU-like proteins. These Plasmodium OTU-like proteins have highly conserved residues in the catalytic and inhibition pockets similar to viral OTU proteins. Plasmodium OTU proteins demonstrated Ubiquitin and ISG15 deconjugation activities as evident by intracellular ubiquitinated protein content analyzed by western blot and flow cytometry. We screened a library of small molecules to determine plasmodium OTU inhibitors with potent anti-malarial activity. Enrichment and correlation studies identified structurally similar molecules. We have identified two small molecules that inhibit P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. yoelii OTU proteins (IC50 values as low as 30 nM) with potent anti-malarial activity (IC50 of 4.1-6.5 mM). We also established enzyme kinetics, druglikeness, ADME, and QSAR model. MD simulations allowed us to resolve how inhibitors interacted with plasmodium OTU proteins. These findings suggest that targeting malarial OTU-like proteases is a plausible strategy to develop new anti -malarial therapies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available