z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Picomolar Inhibition of Plasmepsin V, an Essential Malaria Protease, Achieved Exploiting the Prime Region
Author(s) -
Luca Gambini,
Luca Rizzi,
Alessandro Pedretti,
Orazio TaglialatelaScafati,
Mario Carucci,
Andrea Pancotti,
C. Galli,
Martin Read,
Emanuele Giurisato,
Sergio Romeo,
Ilaria Russo
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0142509
Subject(s) - in silico , drug discovery , biology , protease , plasmodium falciparum , docking (animal) , antimalarial agent , biochemistry , active site , virtual screening , enzyme , chemistry , pharmacology , malaria , gene , medicine , nursing , immunology
Malaria is an infectious disease caused by Plasmodium parasites. It results in an annual death-toll of ~ 600,000. Resistance to all medications currently in use exists, and novel antimalarial drugs are urgently needed. Plasmepsin V (PmV) is an essential Plasmodium protease and a highly promising antimalarial target, which still lacks molecular characterization and drug-like inhibitors. PmV, cleaving the PExEl motif, is the key enzyme for PExEl-secretion, an indispensable parasitic process for virulence and infection. Here, we describe the accessibility of PmV catalytic pockets to inhibitors and propose a novel strategy for PmV inhibition. We also provide molecular and structural data suitable for future drug development. Using high-throughput platforms, we identified a novel scaffold that interferes with PmV in-vitro at picomolar ranges (~ 1,000-fold more active than available compounds). Via systematic replacement of P and P' regions, we assayed the physico-chemical requirements for PmV inhibition, achieving an unprecedented IC 50 of ~20 pM. The hydroxyethylamine moiety, the hydrogen acceptor group in P 2 ', the lipophilic groups upstream to P 3 , the arginine and other possible substitutions in position P 3 proved to be critically important elements in achieving potent inhibition. In-silico analyses provided essential QSAR information and model validation. Our inhibitors act ‘on-target’, confirmed by cellular interference of PmV function and biochemical interaction with inhibitors. Our inhibitors are poorly performing against parasite growth, possibly due to poor stability of their peptidic component and trans-membrane permeability. The lowest IC 50 for parasite growth inhibition was ~ 15μM. Analysis of inhibitor internalization revealed important pharmacokinetic features for PExEl-based molecules. Our work disclosed novel pursuable drug design strategies for highly efficient PmV inhibition highlighting novel molecular elements necessary for picomolar activity against PmV. All the presented data are discussed in respect to human aspartic proteases and previously reported inhibitors, highlighting differences and proposing new strategies for drug development.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here