4.7 Article

Screening the Pathogen Box for Inhibition of Plasmodium falciparum Sporozoite Motility Reveals a Critical Role for Kinases in Transmission Stages

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 66, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/aac.00418-22

Keywords

Plasmodium falciparum; antimalarial agents; calcium signaling; drug screening; motility; sporozoite; transmission blocking

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI132359, R01 AI065853]
  2. Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute postdoctoral fellowships
  3. Bloomberg Family Philanthropies
  4. NIH [R01 GM28007-S1, R01 GM66817-S1]

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As the malaria parasite becomes resistant to existing drugs, the development of novel drug candidates is crucial. In this study, a moderate-throughput motility assay was established to screen drug-like compounds for their inhibitory effects on the motility of Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites. Five compounds showed significant inhibitory effects and four of them also exhibited inhibitory activity against transmission to mosquitoes. These findings suggest the potential of these compounds as new antimalarial drugs with multistage activity.
As the malaria parasite becomes resistant to every drug that we develop, the identification and development of novel drug candidates are essential. Many studies have screened compounds designed to target the clinically important blood stages. However, if we are to shrink the malaria map, new drugs that block the transmission of the parasite are needed. Sporozoites are the infective stage of the malaria parasite, transmitted to the mammalian host as mosquitoes probe for blood. Sporozoite motility is critical to their ability to exit the inoculation site and establish infection, and drug-like compounds targeting motility are effective at blocking infection in the rodent malaria model. In this study, we established a moderate-throughput motility assay for sporozoites of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, enabling us to screen the 400 drug-like compounds from the pathogen box provided by the Medicines for Malaria Venture for their activity. Compounds exhibiting inhibitory effects on P. falciparum sporozoite motility were further assessed for transmission-blocking activity and asexual-stage growth. Five compounds had a significant inhibitory effect on P. falciparum sporozoite motility in the nanomolar range. Using membrane feeding assays, we demonstrate that four of these compounds had inhibitory activity against the transmission of P. falciparum to the mosquito. Interestingly, of the four compounds with inhibitory activity against both transmission stages, three are known kinase inhibitors. Together with a previous study that found that several of these compounds could inhibit asexual blood-stage parasite growth, our findings provide new antimalarial drug candidates that have multistage activity.

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