4.7 Article

An in silico quest for next-generation antimalarial drugs by targeting Plasmodium falciparum hexose transporter protein: a multi-pronged approach

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Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2023.2181635

Keywords

Plasmodium falciparum; hexose transporter 1; BBB_25784317; BBB_26580136; BBB_26580144; molecular dynamic simulations

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The emergence of artemisinin resistance by malaria parasites is a major challenge in the fight against malaria. To tackle this, antimalarial drugs with unconventional mechanisms are urgently needed. Blocking the function of hexose transporter 1 (PfHT1) protein, the only known transporter for glucose uptake in Plasmodium falciparum, can selectively starve the parasites and provide an alternative approach to fight drug-resistant malaria.
The emergence of artemisinin resistance by malaria parasites is a major challenge in the fight against malaria, thus posing serious threat to the public health across the world. To tackle this, antimalarial drugs with unconventional mechanisms are therefore urgently needed. It has been reported that selective starvation of Plasmodium falciparum by blocking the function of hexose transporter 1 (PfHT1) protein, the only known transporter for glucose uptake in P. falciparum, could provide an alternative approach to fight the drug resistant malaria parasites. In this study, three high affinity molecules (BBB_25784317, BBB_26580136 and BBB_26580144) that have shown the best docked conformation and least binding energy with PfHT1 were shortlisted. The docking energy of BBB_25784317, BBB_26580136 and BBB_26580144 with PfHT1 were -12.5, -12.1 and -12.0 kcal/mol, respectively. In the follow up simulation studies, the protein 3D structure maintains considerable stability in the presence of the compounds. It was also observed that the compounds produced a number of hydrophilic and hydrophobic interactions with the protein allosteric site residues. This demonstrates strong intermolecular interaction guided by close distance hydrogen bonds of compounds with Ser45, Asn48, Thr49, Asn52, Ser317, Asn318, Ile330 and Ser334. Revalidation of compounds binding affinity was conducted by more appropriate simulation based binding free energy techniques (MM-GB/PBSA and WaterSwap). Additionally, entropy assay was performed that further strengthen the predictions. In silico pharmacokinetics confirmed that the compounds would be suitable candidates for oral delivery due to their high gastrointestinal absorption and less toxic reaction. Overall, the predicted compounds are promising and could be further sought as antimalarial leads and subjected to thorough experimental investigations.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

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