Comparative chemical genomics in Babesia species identifies the alkaline phosphatase PhoD as a determinant of antiparasitic resistance

Author:

Keroack Caroline D.1ORCID,Elsworth Brendan1ORCID,Tennessen Jacob A.1,Paul Aditya S.1,Hua Renee1,Ramirez-Ramirez Luz1,Ye Sida23ORCID,Moreira Cristina K.1ORCID,Meyers Marvin J.4ORCID,Zarringhalam Kourosh23,Duraisingh Manoj T.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115

2. Department of Mathematics, University of Massachusetts, Boston, MA 02125

3. Center for Personalized Cancer Therapy, University of Massachusetts, Boston, MA 02125

4. Department of Chemistry, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO 63103

Abstract

Babesiosis is an emerging zoonosis and widely distributed veterinary infection caused by 100+ species of Babesia parasites. The diversity of Babesia parasites and the lack of specific drugs necessitate the discovery of broadly effective antibabesials. Here, we describe a comparative chemogenomics (CCG) pipeline for the identification of conserved targets. CCG relies on parallel in vitro evolution of resistance in independent populations of Babesia spp. ( B. bovis and B. divergens ). We identified a potent antibabesial, MMV019266, from the Malaria Box, and selected for resistance in two species of Babesia . After sequencing of multiple independently derived lines in the two species, we identified mutations in a membrane-bound metallodependent phosphatase ( phoD ). In both species, the mutations were found in the phoD-like phosphatase domain. Using reverse genetics, we validated that mutations in bdphoD confer resistance to MMV019266 in B. divergens . We have also demonstrated that BdPhoD localizes to the endomembrane system and partially with the apicoplast. Finally, conditional knockdown and constitutive overexpression of BdPhoD alter the sensitivity to MMV019266 in the parasite. Overexpression of BdPhoD results in increased sensitivity to the compound, while knockdown increases resistance, suggesting BdPhoD is a pro-susceptibility factor. Together, we have generated a robust pipeline for identification of resistance loci and identified BdPhoD as a resistance mechanism in Babesia species.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

American Heart Association

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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