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Biochemical Screening of Five Protein Kinases from Plasmodium falciparum against 14,000 Cell-Active Compounds

Authors :
Jack S. Mo
Sonja Ghidelli-Disse
Majida El Bakkouri
Gerard Drewes
Mallory M. Krahn
Jackson C. Jones
Kasey Rivas
Katelyn R. Keyloun
Kartheek S. Dasari
Wesley C. Van Voorhis
Maria Jose Lafuente-Monasterio
Stephen E. Leonard
Dustin J. Maly
Panqing He
Kayode K. Ojo
Heidi K. Hillesland
Didier Leroy
Raymond Hui
Gregory J. Crowther
Markus Boesche
Molly C. Reid
Anna M. W. Fox
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 11, Iss 3, p e0149996 (2016)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In 2010 the identities of thousands of anti-Plasmodium compounds were released publicly to facilitate malaria drug development. Understanding these compounds' mechanisms of action--i.e., the specific molecular targets by which they kill the parasite--would further facilitate the drug development process. Given that kinases are promising anti-malaria targets, we screened ~14,000 cell-active compounds for activity against five different protein kinases. Collections of cell-active compounds from GlaxoSmithKline (the ~13,000-compound Tres Cantos Antimalarial Set, or TCAMS), St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (260 compounds), and the Medicines for Malaria Venture (the 400-compound Malaria Box) were screened in biochemical assays of Plasmodium falciparum calcium-dependent protein kinases 1 and 4 (CDPK1 and CDPK4), mitogen-associated protein kinase 2 (MAPK2/MAP2), protein kinase 6 (PK6), and protein kinase 7 (PK7). Novel potent inhibitors (IC50 < 1 μM) were discovered for three of the kinases: CDPK1, CDPK4, and PK6. The PK6 inhibitors are the most potent yet discovered for this enzyme and deserve further scrutiny. Additionally, kinome-wide competition assays revealed a compound that inhibits CDPK4 with few effects on ~150 human kinases, and several related compounds that inhibit CDPK1 and CDPK4 yet have limited cytotoxicity to human (HepG2) cells. Our data suggest that inhibiting multiple Plasmodium kinase targets without harming human cells is challenging but feasible.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
11
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PloS one
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....74d962e31b19a72da100fd049083c828