Affiliation:
1. Monash University
2. Deakin University
3. Griffith University
4. University of Basel
5. Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
6. Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Abstract
New antimalarial drug candidates that act via novel mechanisms are urgently needed to combat malaria drug resistance. Here, we describe the multi-omic chemical validation of
Plasmodium
M1 alanyl metalloaminopeptidase as an attractive drug target using the selective inhibitor, MIPS2673. MIPS2673 demonstrated potent inhibition of recombinant
Plasmodium falciparum
(
Pf
A-M1) and
Plasmodium vivax
(
Pv
-M1) M1 metalloaminopeptidases, with selectivity over other
Plasmodium
and human aminopeptidases, and displayed excellent
in vitro
antimalarial activity with no significant host cytotoxicity. Orthogonal label-free chemoproteomic methods based on thermal stability and limited proteolysis of whole parasite lysates revealed that MIPS2673 solely targets
Pf
A-M1 in parasites, with limited proteolysis also enabling estimation of the binding site on
Pf
A-M1 to within ~5 Å of that determined by X-ray crystallography. Finally, functional investigation by untargeted metabolomics demonstrated that MIPS2673 inhibits the key role of
Pf
A-M1 in haemoglobin digestion. Combined, our unbiased multi-omic target deconvolution strategies confirmed the on-target activity of MIPS2673, and validated selective inhibition of M1 alanyl metalloaminopeptidase as a promising multi-stage and cross-species antimalarial strategy.
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd