| Literature DB >> 31640748 |
Annie N Cowell1, Elizabeth A Winzeler2.
Abstract
A major advance in antimalarial drug discovery has been the shift towards cell-based phenotypic screening, with notable progress in the screening of compounds against the asexual blood stage, liver stage, and gametocytes. A primary method for drug target deconvolution in Plasmodium falciparum is in vitro evolution of compound-resistant parasites followed by whole-genome scans. Several of the most promising antimalarial drug targets, such as translation elongation factor 2 (eEF2) and phenylalanine tRNA synthetase (PheRS), have been identified or confirmed using this method. One drawback of this method is that if a mutated gene is uncharacterized, a substantial effort may be required to determine whether it is a drug target, a drug resistance gene, or if the mutation is merely a background mutation. Thus, the availability of high-throughput, functional genomic datasets can greatly assist with target deconvolution. Studies mapping genome-wide essentiality in P. falciparum or performing transcriptional profiling of the host and parasite during liver-stage infection with P. berghei have identified potentially druggable pathways. Advances in mapping the epigenomic regulation of the malaria parasite genome have also enabled the identification of key processes involved in parasite development. In addition, the examination of the host genome during infection has identified novel gene candidates associated with susceptibility to severe malaria. Here, we review recent studies that have used omics-based methods to identify novel targets for interventions against protozoan parasites, focusing on malaria, and we highlight the advantages and limitations of the approaches used. These approaches have also been extended to other protozoan pathogens, including Toxoplasma, Trypanosoma, and Leishmania spp., and these studies highlight how drug discovery efforts against these pathogens benefit from the utilization of diverse omics-based methods to identify promising drug targets.Entities:
Keywords: Drug discovery; Genomics; Malaria; Plasmodium; Resistance; Target discovery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31640748 PMCID: PMC6805675 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-019-0673-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Overview of the protozoan pathogens highlighted in this review
| Pathogen | Disease(s) caused | Current treatments | Mechanism of action |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Malaria | 4-Aminoquinolines (chloroquine, amodiaquine, piperaquine) | Inhibit heme detoxification |
| 8-Aminoquinolones (primaquine, tafenaquine) | Unknown | ||
| Aryl amino-alcohols (lumefantrine, mefloquine) | Inhibit heme detoxification | ||
| Antifolate drugs (proguanil, pyrimethamine, sulfadoxine) | Inhibit folate synthesis | ||
| Antibiotics (doxycycline, clindamycin) | Inhibit protein synthesis | ||
| Napthoquinones (atovaquone) | Inhibit cytochrome bc1 complex | ||
| Artemisinin compounds (artemisinin, artemether, dihydroartemisinin) | Oxidative stress | ||
|
| Chagas disease | Nitroheterocyclic drugs (nifurtimox, benznidazole) | Oxidative stress |
| Sleeping sickness | Pentamidine | Disrupts mitochondrial processes | |
| Melarsoprol | Inhibits trypanosomal redox metabolism and glycolysis | ||
| Suramin | Disrupts trypanosomal redox metabolism and glycolysis | ||
| Eflornithine | Inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase | ||
|
| Cutaneous, visceral, or mucosal leishmaniasis | Pentavalent antimonial compounds | Unclear |
| Amphotericin B | Targets the main parasite membrane sterol | ||
| Miltefosine | Interferes with cell membrane composition | ||
| Paromomycin | Inhibits protein synthesis | ||
|
| Flu-like illness, disseminated infection, congenital infection | Pyrimethamine | Inhibit folate synthesis |
| Sulfadiazine |
For more detailed information on treatments, mechanisms of action, and mechanisms of resistance for each pathogen, please refer to the following literature: P. falciparum [3], Trypanosoma [4–7], Leishmania [8–11], and Toxoplasma [12, 13]
Fig. 1Overview of the antimalarial target discovery and drug discovery processes. Phenotypic screening is undertaken with diverse compound libraries using assays that target different stages of the malaria life cycle: blood stage, liver stage, and gametocytes. Compounds that demonstrate potent antimalarial activity can go directly into hit-to-lead studies and can progress to clinical studies. Simultaneously, target discovery can be carried out using different methods, such as affinity chromatography, in vitro evolution and whole-genome analysis (IVIEWGA) [17], and metabolic profiling. Target validation can be carried out using gene knockdown approaches such as the TetR-aptamer system [18]. Genome-wide essentiality data can also help with target validation. Target structures can then be determined, and recombinant protein targets can be used in biochemical screens. Hit-to-lead optimization can occur without knowing a target, although development is facilitated when the target is known
Summary of omics-based technologies used for target discovery and validation for protozoan pathogens
| Technology | Tools used | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro evolution and whole-genome analysis | - Tiling microarrays - Whole-genome sequencing | - Identifying the targets of compounds - Analyzing the mechanisms of resistance | - Can determine the targets of compounds from phenotypic screens - Simultaneously enables the assessment of mechanisms of resistance - High specificity | - Resistance mutations may obscure mutations in the gene encoding the target - Inability to generate in vitro resistance to some compounds, particularly fast-killing compounds |
| Genome-wide essentiality studies | - - Targeted barcode gene knockouts | - Determining essential pathways, thereby identifying potentially druggable pathways | - Assesses the entire genome at once - A gene or pathway can be directly linked to a particular phenotype | - Transposition may occur in essential genes - Assessment is limited to annotated genes - Some genes are more amenable to transposon mutagenesis or gene knockout |
| Transcriptomic analysis | - RNA-seq of the pathogen - Dual RNA-seq of host cells and the pathogen | - Identifies pathogen gene pathways that are upregulated during infection - Identifies host pathways that are important in response to infection | - Provides information about the upregulation of genes relative to other pathways | - Assessment is limited to annotated genes - High sequencing coverage is needed to detect meaningful changes resulting from low-level infection |
| Proteomics | - Mass spectrometry - Nuclear magnetic resonance-based structure guidance | - Target identification - Target validation - Understanding mechanisms of resistance | - Can identify the cellular location of a target or mechanism of resistance - Targeting protein-protein interactions increases the number of potential inhibitor-binding locations | - Multiple proteins are typically identified in initial studies - Success is dependent on whether the inhibition is potent enough to cure the disease |
| Epigenomics | - ATAC-seq (assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing) - ChIP-seq (chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing) | - Identifying which genes are expressed or silent at different stages of the parasite life cycle | - Can help to interpret whole-genome data by assessing whether intergenic mutations are in regulatory regions | - ATAC-seq is biased against AT-rich sequences |
Potential target proteins and pathways identified in recent studies of protozoan pathogens
| Parasite | Potential target | Pathway | Parasite stage(s) at which target can be inhibited | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Translation elongation factor 2 [ | Protein synthesis [ | Blood, liver, gametocytes | Mediates GTP-dependent ribosome translocation along mRNA [ |
| Phenylalanine tRNA synthetase [ | Protein translation | Blood, liver, gametocytes | Catalyzes the attachment of amino acids to tRNA [ | |
| β2 subunit of the proteasome [ | Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway | Blood, liver, gametocytes | Catalyzes protein degradation [ | |
| Farnesyltransferase [ | Enables cell cycle progression | Blood, liver | Adds a farnesyl group to the carboxyl terminus of specific proteins [ | |
| Dipeptidyl aminopeptidase 1 [ | Hemoglobin catabolism | Blood | Cleaves amino acids from proteins or oligopeptides [ | |
| Aminophospholipid-transporting P-type ATPase [ | Maintenance of cell membrane potential | Blood, liver | Phospholipid transport [ | |
| Thymidylate synthase [ | DNA synthesis | Blood | Folate biosynthesis | |
| Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase [ | Phosphorylation-dependent signaling | Blood, gametocytes | Enables parasite egress from and invasion of red blood cells [ | |
| Calcium-dependent protein kinase 5 [ | Calcium regulation | Blood | Critical for parasite egress from red blood cells [ | |
| Cyclin-dependent-like kinase 3 [ | Gene expression | Blood, liver, gametocytes | Plays a role in mRNA splicing [ | |
|
| β4 subunit of the proteasome [ | Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway | Tissue and blood stage | Catalyzes protein degradation |
| Peroxin interaction [ | Glycosomal biogenesis and import | Blood stage | Enables glucose metabolism | |
|
| β4 subunit of the proteasome [ | Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway | Intracellular | Catalyzes protein degradation |
| Cyclin-dependent kinase 12 [ | Control of transcription and cell division [ | Intracellular | Precise role unclear | |
|
| Claudin-like apicomplexan microneme protein [ | Formation of tight junctions through which parasites enter host cells | Tachyzoites | Essential for the invasion of host cells |
Fig. 2High-throughput genetic validation of targets. Two methods have been used to determine gene essentiality. a Zhang et al. [36] used a piggyBac transposon system in P. falciparum to determine genes that could be disrupted using culture conditions that were considered ideal for the asexual blood stage [36]. Transfection with the piggyBac plasmid (pLBacII-HDH) was performed in a 96-well plate, and parasites containing the plasmid marker (dhfr) were selected for and regrown in culture. DNA was then extracted and quantitative insertion-site sequencing (QI-seq) was performed to determine the sites of insertion. Mutagenesis index scoring was then used to identify genes with the highest confidence of disruption and nondisruption. b Bushell et al. [58] used barcode vectors to determine which genes were essential for asexual blood stage growth using an in vivo system in mice. The vectors were transfected into P. berghei schizonts, which were inoculated into mice, and growth was determined by measuring parasitemia on subsequent days of infection. Four growth phenotypes were observed, among which “essential genes” and “slow-growing mutants” were determined to be essential or important for asexual blood stage growth
Fig. 3Methods for transcriptional profiling of the Plasmodium hypnozoite. a Gural et al. [67] used a micropatterned primary human hepatocyte co-culture (MPCC) system to support the growth of P. vivax hypnozoites [67]. Cultures were enriched for hypnozoites by treating with a phosphatidylinositol-4-kinase (PI4K) inhibitor, and RNA was then extracted and enriched for P. vivax transcripts using biotinylated baits, before being sequenced and compared to RNA from untreated cultures. b Voorberg-van der Wel et al. [68] infected rhesus monkeys with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged P. cynomolgi and fed mosquitoes with the blood obtained during peak parasitemia [68]. Sporozoites were harvested from the mosquitoes, and hepatocytes from macaque monkeys were infected using an in vitro system. These cells were sorted on the basis of GFP signal into hypnozoites (GFPlow signal) and schizonts (GFPhigh signal), before RNA-seq was performed, and data from each group were compared