| Literature DB >> 33483532 |
Dorjbal Dorjsuren1, Richard T Eastman1, Anton Simeonov2, David A Fidock3,4, Kathryn J Wicht5,6, Daniel Jansen1, Daniel C Talley1, Benjamin A Sigmon1, Alexey V Zakharov1, Norma Roncal7, Andrew T Girvin8, Yevgeniya Antonova-Koch9,10, Paul M Will1, Pranav Shah1, Hongmao Sun1, Carleen Klumpp-Thomas1, Sachel Mok5, Tomas Yeo5, Stephan Meister9,11, Juan Jose Marugan1, Leila S Ross5, Xin Xu1, David J Maloney1,12, Ajit Jadhav1, Bryan T Mott1, Richard J Sciotti7, Elizabeth A Winzeler9, Norman C Waters7, Robert F Campbell7, Wenwei Huang1.
Abstract
The spread of Plasmodium falciparum parasites resistant to most first-line antimalarials creates an imperative to enrich the drug discovery pipeline, preferably with curative compounds that can also act prophylactically. We report a phenotypic quantitative high-throughput screen (qHTS), based on concentration-response curves, which was designed to identify compounds active against Plasmodium liver and asexual blood stage parasites. Our qHTS screened over 450,000 compounds, tested across a range of 5 to 11 concentrations, for activity against Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages. Active compounds were then filtered for unique structures and drug-like properties and subsequently screened in a P. berghei liver stage assay to identify novel dual-active antiplasmodial chemotypes. Hits from thiadiazine and pyrimidine azepine chemotypes were subsequently prioritized for resistance selection studies, yielding distinct mutations in P. falciparum cytochrome b, a validated antimalarial drug target. The thiadiazine chemotype was subjected to an initial medicinal chemistry campaign, yielding a metabolically stable analog with sub-micromolar potency. Our qHTS methodology and resulting dataset provides a large-scale resource to investigate Plasmodium liver and asexual blood stage parasite biology and inform further research to develop novel chemotypes as causal prophylactic antimalarials.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33483532 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-81486-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379