Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, and the South Texas Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Plasmodium
parasite resistance to antimalarial drugs is a serious threat to public health in malaria-endemic areas. Compounds that target core cellular processes like translation are highly desirable, as they should be capable of killing parasites in their liver and blood stage forms, regardless of molecular target or mechanism. Assays that can identify these compounds are thus needed. Recently, specific quantification of native
Plasmodium berghei
liver stage protein synthesis, as well as that of the hepatoma cells supporting parasite growth, was achieved via automated confocal feedback microscopy of the o-propargyl puromycin (OPP)-labeled nascent proteome, but this imaging modality is limited in throughput. Here, we developed and validated a miniaturized high content imaging (HCI) version of the OPP assay that increases throughput, before deploying this approach to screen the Pathogen Box. We identified only two hits; both of which are parasite-specific quinoline-4-carboxamides, and analogs of the clinical candidate and known inhibitor of blood and liver stage protein synthesis, DDD107498/cabamiquine. We further show that these compounds have strikingly distinct relationships between their antiplasmodial and translation inhibition efficacies. These results demonstrate the utility and reliability of the
P. berghei
liver stage OPP HCI assay for the specific, single-well quantification of
Plasmodium
and human protein synthesis in the native cellular context, allowing the identification of selective
Plasmodium
translation inhibitors with the highest potential for multistage activity.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology