Author:
Harris Michael T.,Walker Dawn M.,Drew Mark E.,Mitchell William G.,Dao Kevin,Schroeder Chad E.,Flaherty Daniel P.,Weiner Warren S.,Golden Jennifer E.,Morris James C.
Abstract
ABSTRACTParasites in the genusPlasmodiumcause disease throughout the tropic and subtropical regions of the world.P. falciparum, one of the deadliest species of the parasite, relies on glycolysis for the generation of ATP while it inhabits the mammalian red blood cell. The first step in glycolysis is catalyzed by hexokinase (HK). While the 55.3-kDaP. falciparumHK (PfHK) shares several biochemical characteristics with mammalian HKs, including being inhibited by its products, it has limited amino acid identity (∼26%) to the human HKs, suggesting that enzyme-specific therapeutics could be generated. To that end, interrogation of a selected small-molecule library of HK inhibitors has identified a class of PfHK inhibitors, isobenzothiazolinones, some of which have 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) of <1 μM. Inhibition was reversible by dilution but not by treatment with a reducing agent, suggesting that the basis for enzyme inactivation was not covalent association with the inhibitor. Lastly, six of these compounds and the related molecule ebselen inhibitedP. falciparumgrowthin vitro(50% effective concentration [EC50] of ≥0.6 and <6.8 μM). These findings suggest that the chemotypes identified here could represent leads for future development of therapeutics againstP. falciparum.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
43 articles.
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