4.7 Article

Antimalarial and Plasmodium falciparum serpentine receptor 12 targeting effect of FDA approved purinergic receptor antagonist

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS
Volume 41, Issue 19, Pages 9462-9475

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2022.2142298

Keywords

Malaria; Plasmodium falciparum; purinergic signalling; serpentine receptor; PfSR12; Prasugrel

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This study investigated the localization and druggability of serpentine receptors in Plasmodium, and demonstrated the strong binding interaction between PfSR12 and R138727. The findings suggest the importance of purinergic signaling and PfSR12 in the survival and development of the malaria parasite, and indicate that Prasugrel may serve as a potential antimalarial therapy targeting PfSR12.
Intraerythrocytic stages of Plasmodium falciparum responsible for all clinical manifestations of malaria are regulated by array of signalling cascades that represent attractive targets for antimalarial therapy. G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are druggable targets in the treatment of various pathological conditions, however, there is limited understanding about the role of GPCRs in malaria pathogenesis. In Plasmodium, serpentine receptors (PfSR1, PfSR10, PfSR12 and PfSR25) with GPCR-like membrane topology have been reported with the finite knowledge about their potential as antimalarial targets. We analyzed the localization of these receptors in malaria parasite by immunofluorescence assays. All four receptors were expressed in blood stages with PfSR12 expressing more in late intraerythrocytic stages. Further, we evaluated the druggability of PfSR12 using FDA-approved P2Y purinergic receptor antagonist, Prasugrel and its active metabolite R138727, which is proposed to be specific towards PfSR12. Interestingly, biophysical analysis indicated strong binding between PfSR12 and R138727 as compared to the prodrug Prasugrel. This binding interaction was further confirmed by thermal shift assay. Treatment of parasite with Prasugrel and R138727 resulted in growth inhibition of P. falciparum indicating an important role of purinergic signalling and PfSR12 in parasite survival. Next, progression studies indicated the inhibitory effect of Prasugrel begins in late erythrocyte stages corroborating with PfSR12 expression at these stages. Furthermore, Prasugrel also blocked in vivo growth of malaria parasite in a mouse experimental model. This study indicates the presence of P2Y type of purinergic signalling in growth and development of malaria parasite and suggests PfSR12, putative purinergic receptor druggability through Prasugrel. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

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