Login / Signup

Design, Synthesis, and Optimization of Macrocyclic Peptides as Species-Selective Antimalaria Proteasome Inhibitors.

Hao ZhangJohn GinnWenhu ZhanYi J LiuAnnie LeungAkinori ToitaRei OkamotoTzu-Tshin WongToshihiro ImaedaRyoma HaraTakafumi YukawaMayako MichinoJeremie VendomeThijs BeumingKenjiro SatoKazuyoshi AsoPeter T MeinkeCarl F NathanLaura A KirkmanGang Lin
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2022)
With over 200 million cases and close to half a million deaths each year, malaria is a threat to global health, particularly in developing countries. Plasmodium falciparum , the parasite that causes the most severe form of the disease, has developed resistance to all antimalarial drugs. Resistance to the first-line antimalarial artemisinin and to artemisinin combination therapies is widespread in Southeast Asia and is emerging in sub-Saharan Africa. The P. falciparum proteasome is an attractive antimalarial target because its inhibition kills the parasite at multiple stages of its life cycle and restores artemisinin sensitivity in parasites that have become resistant through mutation in Kelch K13. Here, we detail our efforts to develop noncovalent, macrocyclic peptide malaria proteasome inhibitors, guided by structural analysis and pharmacokinetic properties, leading to a potent, species-selective, metabolically stable inhibitor.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • global health
  • life cycle
  • public health
  • genetic diversity
  • amino acid