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1.
Malaria is a devastating disease that still claims over half a million lives every year, mostly in sub–Saharan Africa. One of the main barriers to malaria control is the evolution and propagation of drug-resistant mutant parasites. Knowing the genes and respective mutations responsible for drug resistance facilitates the design of drugs with novel modes of action and allows predicting and monitoring drug resistance in natural parasite populations in real-time. The best way to identify these mutations is to experimentally evolve resistance to the drug in question and then comparing the genomes of the drug-resistant mutants to that of the sensitive progenitor parasites. This simple evolutive concept was the starting point for the development of a paradigm over the years, based on the use of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium chabaudi to unravel the genetics of drug resistance in malaria. It involves the use of a cloned parasite isolate (P. chabaudi AS) whose genome is well characterized, to artificially select resistance to given drugs through serial passages in mice under slowly increasing drug pressure. The end resulting parasites are cloned and the genetic mutations are then discovered through Linkage Group Selection, a technique conceived by Prof. Richard Carter and his group, and/or Whole Genome Sequencing. The precise role of these mutations can then be interrogated in malaria parasites of humans through allelic replacement experiments and/or genotype-phenotype association studies in natural parasite populations. Using this paradigm, all the mutations underlying resistance to the most important antimalarial drugs were identified, most of which were pioneering and later shown to also play a role in drug resistance in natural infections of human malaria parasites. This supports the use of P. chabaudi a fast-track predictive model to identify candidate genetic markers of resistance to present and future antimalarial drugs and improving our understanding of the biology of resistance.  相似文献   

2.
Heat shock proteins act as molecular chaperones, facilitating protein folding in cells of living organisms. Their role is particularly important in parasites because environmental changes associated with their life cycles place a strain on protein homoeostasis. Not surprisingly, some heat shock proteins are essential for the survival of the most virulent malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum . This justifies the need for a greater understanding of the specific roles and regulation of malarial heat shock proteins. Furthermore, heat shock proteins play a major role during invasion of the host by the parasite and mediate in malaria pathogenesis. The identification and development of inhibitor compounds of heat shock proteins has recently attracted attention. This is important, given the fact that traditional antimalarial drugs are increasingly failing, as a consequence of parasite increasing drug resistance. Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), Hsp70/Hsp40 partnerships and small heat shock proteins are major malaria drug targets. This review examines the structural and functional features of these proteins that render them ideal drug targets and the challenges of targeting these proteins towards malaria drug design. The major antimalarial compounds that have been used to inhibit heat shock proteins include the antibiotic, geldanamycin, deoxyspergualin and pyrimidinones. The proposed mechanisms of action of these molecules and the pathways they inhibit are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
New drugs against malaria are urgently and continuously needed. Plasmodium parasites are exposed to higher fluxes of reactive oxygen species and need high activities of intracellular antioxidant systems. A most important antioxidative system consists of (di)thiols which are recycled by disulfide reductases (DR), namely both glutathione reductases (GR) of the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum and man, and the thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) of P. falciparum. The aim of our interdisciplinary research is to substantiate DR inhibitors as antimalarial agents. Such compounds are active per se but, in addition, they can reverse thiol-based resistance against other drugs in parasites. Reversal of drug resistance by DR inhibitors is currently investigated for the commonly used antimalarial drug chloroquine (CQ). Our recent strategy is based on the synthesis of inhibitors of the glutathione reductases from parasite and host erythrocyte. With the expectation of a synergistic or additive effect, double-headed prodrugs were designed to be directed against two different and essential functions of the malarial parasite P. falciparum, namely glutathione regeneration and heme detoxification. The prodrugs were prepared by linking bioreversibly a GR inhibitor to a 4-aminoquinoline moiety which is known to concentrate in the acidic food vacuole of parasites. Drug-enzyme interaction was correlated with antiparasitic action in vitro on strains resistant towards CQ and in vivo in Plasmodium berghei-infected mice as well as absence of cytotoxicity towards human cells. Because TrxR of P. falciparum was recently shown to be responsible for the residual glutathione disulfide-reducing capacity observed after GR inhibition in P. falciparum, future development of antimalarial drug-candidates that act by perturbing the redox equilibrium of parasites is based on the design of new double-drugs based on TrxR inhibitors as potential antimalarial drug candidates.  相似文献   

4.
Reliable analytical techniques to test growth-promoting and antimalarial efficacy on plasmodia are very important. Flow cytometry (FCM) offers the possibility to study developmental stages of intraerythrocytic growth of malaria parasites using nucleic acid staining. To analyze the growth of Plasmodium falciparum SYBR Green I was introduced as an intercalating dye with FCM for the 488 nm line of an argon laser. Procedures employing FCM, including fixatives, dye concentrations, dilution buffer, and staining period, were optimized to simplify the method. FCM as described here allows parasitemia and parasites of different stages to be quantified according to the DNA content. The proportion of parasitized erythrocytes estimated by FCM and the Giemsa method agreed with determination by parasite lactate dehydrogenase. The protocol was extended to merozoite counting as a sensitive assay of growth inhibition of the parasite.  相似文献   

5.
Malaria is caused by infection with protozoan parasites of the Plasmodium genus, which is part of the phylum Apicomplexa. Most organisms in this phylum contain a relic plastid called the apicoplast. The apicoplast genome is replicated by a single DNA polymerase (apPOL), which is an attractive target for anti-malarial drugs. We screened small-molecule libraries (206,504 compounds) using a fluorescence-based high-throughput DNA polymerase assay. Dose/response analysis and counter-screening identified 186 specific apPOL inhibitors. Toxicity screening against human HepaRG human cells removed 84 compounds and the remaining were subjected to parasite killing assays using chloroquine resistant P. falciparum parasites. Nine compounds were potent inhibitors of parasite growth and may serve as lead compounds in efforts to discover novel malaria drugs.  相似文献   

6.
The human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, has long been known to have a homologue of the human 'multidrug resistance' P-glycoprotein. P-glycoprotein is an ABC transporter that pumps drugs from multidrug-resistant cancer cells. The malaria parasite's P-glycoprotein homologue, Pgh1, is known to influence the sensitivity of malaria parasites to a diverse range of antimalarial drugs, but the mechanism by which it does so has remained obscure. In a new paper, Sanchez et al. report the successful functional expression of Pgh1 in Xenopus laevis oocytes and provide the first direct demonstration of the ability of Pgh1 to transport drugs. The work provides important new insights into the mechanism by which Pgh1 influences malaria parasite drug sensitivity.  相似文献   

7.
Development of resistance against current antimalarial drugs necessitates the search for novel drugs that interact with different targets and have distinct mechanisms of action. Malaria parasites depend upon high levels of glucose uptake followed by inefficient metabolic utilization via the glycolytic pathway, and the Plasmodium falciparum hexose transporter PfHT, which mediates uptake of glucose, has thus been recognized as a promising drug target. This transporter is highly divergent from mammalian hexose transporters, and it appears to be a permease that is essential for parasite viability in intra-erythrocytic, mosquito, and liver stages of the parasite life cycle. An assay was developed that is appropriate for high throughput screening against PfHT based upon heterologous expression of PfHT in Leishmania mexicana parasites that are null mutants for their endogenous hexose transporters. Screening of two focused libraries of antimalarial compounds identified two such compounds that are high potency selective inhibitors of PfHT compared to human GLUT1. Additionally, 7 other compounds were identified that are lower potency and lower specificity PfHT inhibitors but might nonetheless serve as starting points for identification of analogs with more selective properties. These results further support the potential of PfHT as a novel drug target.  相似文献   

8.
Anopheles mosquitoes are major vectors of human malaria in Africa. Large variation exists in the ability of mosquitoes to serve as vectors and to transmit malaria parasites, but the molecular mechanisms that determine vectorial capacity remain poorly understood. We report that the hemocyte-specific complement-like protein TEP1 from the mosquito Anopheles gambiae binds to and mediates killing of midgut stages of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei. The dsRNA knockdown of TEP1 in adults completely abolishes melanotic refractoriness in a genetically selected refractory strain. Moreover, in susceptible mosquitoes this knockdown increases the number of developing parasites. Our results suggest that the TEP1-dependent parasite killing is followed by a TEP1-independent clearance of dead parasites by lysis and/or melanization. Further elucidation of the molecular mechanisms of TEP1-mediated parasite killing will be of great importance for our understanding of the principles of vectorial capacity in insects.  相似文献   

9.
Digestion of hemoglobin in the food vacuole of the malaria parasite produces very high quantities of redox active toxic free heme. Hemozoin (beta-hematin) formation is a unique process adopted by Plasmodium sp. to detoxify free heme. Hemozoin formation is a validated target for most of the well-known existing antimalarial drugs and considered to be a suitable target to develop new antimalarials. Here we discuss the possible mechanisms of free heme detoxification in the malaria parasite and the mechanistic details of compounds, which offer antimalarial activity by inhibiting hemozoin formation. The chemical nature of new antimalarial compounds showing antimalarial activity through the inhibition of hemozoin formation has also been incorporated, which may help to design future antimalarials with therapeutic potential against multi-drug resistant malaria.  相似文献   

10.
The emergence and spread of drug-resistant parasites coupled with the absence of an effective vaccine makes malaria treatment more complicated, and thus the development of new antimalarial drugs is one of the urgent tasks in malaria research. This review highlights lipid metabolism in Plasmodium parasite cells, the study of which would lead to providing new targets for therapeutic intervention.  相似文献   

11.
The emergence of drug‐resistant malaria parasites is the major threat to effective malaria control, prompting a search for novel compounds with mechanisms of action that are different from the traditionally used drugs. The immunosuppressive drug FK506 shows an antimalarial activity. The mechanism of the drug action involves the molecular interaction with the parasite target proteins PfFKBP35 and PvFKBP35, which are novel FK506 binding protein family (FKBP) members from Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax, respectively. Currently, molecular mechanisms of the FKBP family proteins in the parasites still remain elusive. To understand their functions, here we have determined the structures of the FK506 binding domain of Plasmodium vivax (PvFKBD) in unliganded form by NMR spectroscopy and in complex with FK506 by X‐ray crystallography. We found out that PvFKBP35 exhibits a canonical FKBD fold and shares kinetic profiles similar to those of PfFKBP35, the homologous protein in P. falciparum, indicating that the parasite FKBP family members play similar biological roles in their life cycles. Despite the similarity, differences were observed in the ligand binding modes between PvFKBD and HsFKBP12, a human FKBP homolog, which could provide insightful information into designing selective antimalarial drug against the parasites.  相似文献   

12.
Improving the efficiency of malaria diagnosis is one of the main goals of current malaria research. We have recently developed a magneto-optical (MO) method which allows high-sensitivity detection of malaria pigment (hemozoin crystals) in blood via the magnetically induced rotational motion of the hemozoin crystals. Here, we evaluate this MO technique for the detection of Plasmodium falciparum in infected erythrocytes using in-vitro parasite cultures covering the entire intraerythrocytic life cycle. Our novel method detected parasite densities as low as ∼40 parasites per microliter of blood (0.0008% parasitemia) at the ring stage and less than 10 parasites/µL (0.0002% parasitemia) in the case of the later stages. These limits of detection, corresponding to approximately 20 pg/µL of hemozoin produced by the parasites, exceed that of rapid diagnostic tests and compete with the threshold achievable by light microscopic observation of blood smears. The MO diagnosis requires no special training of the operator or specific reagents for parasite detection, except for an inexpensive lysis solution to release intracellular hemozoin. The devices can be designed to a portable format for clinical and in-field tests. Besides testing its diagnostic performance, we also applied the MO technique to investigate the change in hemozoin concentration during parasite maturation. Our preliminary data indicate that this method may offer an efficient tool to determine the amount of hemozoin produced by the different parasite stages in synchronized cultures. Hence, it could eventually be used for testing the susceptibility of parasites to antimalarial drugs.  相似文献   

13.
New treatments for malaria are urgently needed due to the increasing problem of drug-resistance in malaria parasites. The long-established use of quinine and the more recent introduction of artemisinin and its derivatives as highly effective antimalarials demonstrates that plant species are an important resource for the discovery of new antimalarial agents. Furthermore, many plant species continue to be used in traditional medicines for the treatment of malaria and many people depend on such remedies as they cannot afford and/or do not have access to effective antimalarial drugs. In this paper the potential of plant species to yield new leads to antimalarial drugs will be illustrated with reference to cryptolepine, the main alkaloid present in the species, Cryptolepis sanguinolenta. In addition to this approach, there is currently increasing interest in the use and development of traditional herbal remedies for the treatment of malaria as these may have the potential to provide affordable antimalarial treatment for many who cannot afford the drugs needed to treat chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum infections. However, little is known with respect to the efficacy and safety of traditional antimalarials and clinical studies are urgently needed to establish their value. Some of the issues pertinent to this area will be briefly reviewed and it is hoped that this will stimulate further discussion and research on this important topic.  相似文献   

14.
Recent years have seen tremendous progress in our understanding of malaria parasite molecular biology. To a large extent, this progress follows significant developments in genetic, molecular and chemical tools available to study the malaria parasites and related Apicomplexa, in particular Toxoplasma gondii. One area of major advancement has been in understanding parasite host-cell invasion, a process that utilizes several essential molecular mechanisms that are conserved across the different lifecycle stages. Here, we summarize some of the most recent experimental data that shed light on the events underlying preparation and execution of malaria parasite invasion and how these insights might relate to the development of new antimalarial drugs.  相似文献   

15.
Filariasis, caused by a family of parasitic nematodes, affects millions of individuals throughout the tropics and is a major cause of acute and chronic morbidity. Current drugs are largely used in mass drug administration programs aimed at controlling the spread of disease by killing microfilariae, larval forms of the parasite responsible for transmission from humans to humans through insect vectors with limited efficacy against adult parasites. Although these drugs are effective, in some cases there are toxic liabilities. In case of loiasis which is caused by the parasitic eyeworm Loa loa, mass drug administration is contraindicative due to severe side effects of microfilariae killing, which can be life threatening. Our screening program and medicinal chemistry efforts have led to the identification of a novel series of compounds with potent killing activity against adult filarial parasites and minimal activity against microfilariae. A structural comparison search of our compounds demonstrated a close structural similarity to a recently described histone demethylase inhibitor, GSKJ1/4 which also exhibits selective adult parasite killing. We demonstrated a modification of histone methylation in Brugia malayi parasites treated with our compounds which might indicate that the mode of drug action is at the level of histone methylation. Our results indicate that targeting B. malayi and other filarial parasite demethylases may offer a novel approach for the development of a new class of macrofilaricidal therapeutics.  相似文献   

16.
Preuss J  Jortzik E  Becker K 《IUBMB life》2012,64(7):603-611
Malaria is still one of the most threatening diseases worldwide. The high drug resistance rates of malarial parasites make its eradication difficult and furthermore necessitate the development of new antimalarial drugs. Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for severe malaria and therefore of special interest with regard to drug development. Plasmodium parasites are highly dependent on glucose and very sensitive to oxidative stress; two observations that drew interest to the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) with its key enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). A central position of the PPP for malaria parasites is supported by the fact that human G6PD deficiency protects to a certain degree from malaria infections. Plasmodium parasites and the human host possess a complete PPP, both of which seem to be important for the parasites. Interestingly, there are major differences between parasite and human G6PD, making the enzyme of Plasmodium a promising target for antimalarial drug design. This review gives an overview of the current state of research on glucose-6-phosphate metabolism in P. falciparum and its impact on malaria infections. Moreover, the unique characteristics of the enzyme G6PD in P. falciparum are discussed, upon which its current status as promising target for drug development is based.  相似文献   

17.
Both theory and data suggest that malaria parasites divert resources from within-host replication to the production of transmission stages (gametocytes) when conditions deteriorate. Increased investment into transmission stages should therefore follow subcurative treatment with antimalarial drugs, but relevant clinical studies necessarily lack adequate control groups. We therefore carried out controlled experiments to test this hypothesis, using a rodent malaria (Plasmodium chabaudi) model. Infections treated with a subcurative dose of the antimalarial chloroquine showed an earlier peak and a greater rate of gametocyte production relative to untreated controls. These alterations led to correlated changes in infectivity to mosquitoes, with the consequence that chloroquine treatment had no effect on the proportion of mosquitoes infected. Treatment of human malaria commonly does not result in complete parasite clearance. If surviving parasites produce compensatory increases in their rate of gametocyte production similar to those reported here, such treatment may have minimal effect on decreasing, and may actually increase, transmission. Importantly, if increased investment in transmission is a generalized stress response, the effect might be observed following a variety of antimalarial treatments, including other drugs and potential vaccines. Similar parasite life history counter-adaptations to intervention strategies are likely to occur in many disease-causing organisms.  相似文献   

18.
Antiretroviral protease inhibitors significantly potentiated the sensitivity of chloroquine-resistant malaria parasites to the antimalarial drug in vitro and in vivo. Ritonavir was found to be potent in potentiating CQ antimalarial activities in both -resistant and -sensitive lines. The mechanism by which the APIs modulate the CQ resistance in malaria parasites was further investigated. CQ-resistant parasites showed increased intracellular glutathione levels in comparison with the CQ-sensitive parasites. Treatment with APIs significantly reduced the levels of GSH and glutathione S-transferase activities in CQ-resistant parasites. Ritonavir also decreased glutathione reductase activities and glutathione peroxidase activities in CQ-resistant parasite line. Taken together, these results demonstrate that parasite GSH and GST may play an important role in CQ resistance and APIs are able to enhance the sensitivity of CQ-resistant malaria parasite to the drug by influencing the levels of GSH and the activities of the related enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Trotta RF  Brown ML  Terrell JC  Geyer JA 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):4885-4891
The development and spread of highly drug-resistant parasites pose a central problem in the control of malaria.Understanding mechanisms that regulate genomic stability, such as DNA repair, in drug-resistant parasites and during drug treatment may help determine whether this rapid onset of resistance is due to an increase in the rate at which resistance-causing mutations are generated. This is the first report to demonstrate DNA repair activities from the malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium falciparum that are specific for ultraviolet light-induced DNA damage. The efficiency of DNA repair differs dramatically among P. falciparum strains with varying drug sensitivities. Most notable is the markedly reduced level of repair in the highly drug-resistant W2 isolate, which has been shown to develop resistance to novel drugs at an increased rate when compared to drug-sensitive strains. Additionally, the antimalarial drug chloroquine and other quinoline-like compounds interfered with the DNA synthesis step of the repair process, most likely a result of direct binding to repair substrates. We propose that altered DNA repair, either through defective repair mechanisms or drug-mediated inhibition, may contribute to the accelerated development of drug resistance in the parasite.  相似文献   

20.
In recent years there has been a considerable debate on the population genetic structure of malaria parasites. Work on this subject has been revolutionized by the advent of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique, which has made it feasible to study the genetic diversity of parasites in small samples of infected blood, allowing extensive surveys of natural parasite populations to be made. In addition, the technique can be applied to the mosquito stages of the malaria parasite, allowing direct assessments to be trade of the frequency of crossing between parasite clones in Nature. Studies on Plasmodium falcjparum in a wide range of malaria-endemic regions are now revealing the relationship between parasite population structure and malaria epidemiology. In this article, Hamza Babiker and David Walliker review recent work in this field, and discuss how such knowledge might be used to advise on the future deployment of control measures such as antimalarial drugs and possible malaria vaccines.  相似文献   

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