| Literature DB >> 24619116 |
Timothy Spicer1, Virneliz Fernandez-Vega1, Peter Chase1, Louis Scampavia1, Joyce To2, John P Dalton3, Fabio L Da Silva4, Tina S Skinner-Adams4, Donald L Gardiner4, Katharine R Trenholme4, Christopher L Brown5, Partha Ghosh6, Patrick Porubsky6, Jenna L Wang6, David A Whipple6, Frank J Schoenen6, Peter Hodder7.
Abstract
The target of this study, the PfM18 aspartyl aminopeptidase (PfM18AAP), is the only AAP present in the genome of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. PfM18AAP is a metallo-exopeptidase that exclusively cleaves N-terminal acidic amino acids glutamate and aspartate. It is expressed in parasite cytoplasm and may function in concert with other aminopeptidases in protein degradation, of, for example, hemoglobin. Previous antisense knockdown experiments identified a lethal phenotype associated with PfM18AAP, suggesting that it is a valid target for new antimalaria therapies. To identify inhibitors of PfM18AAP function, a fluorescence enzymatic assay was developed using recombinant PfM18AAP enzyme and a fluorogenic peptide substrate (H-Glu-NHMec). This was screened against the Molecular Libraries Probe Production Centers Network collection of ~292,000 compounds (the Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository). A cathepsin L1 (CTSL1) enzyme-based assay was developed and used as a counter screen to identify compounds with nonspecific activity. Enzymology and phenotypic assays were used to determine mechanism of action and efficacy of selective and potent compounds identified from high-throughput screening. Two structurally related compounds, CID 6852389 and CID 23724194, yielded micromolar potency and were inactive in CTSL1 titration experiments (IC50>59.6 µM). As measured by the K(i) assay, both compounds demonstrated micromolar noncompetitive inhibition in the PfM18AAP enzyme assay. Both CID 6852389 and CID 23724194 demonstrated potency in malaria growth assays (IC504 µM and 1.3 µM, respectively).Entities:
Keywords: PfM18AAP; 1536 well; Plasmodium falciparum; QFRET; aspartyl aminopeptidase; exopeptidase; malaria; parasite
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24619116 PMCID: PMC4641816 DOI: 10.1177/1087057114525852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol Screen ISSN: 1087-0571