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Serine Proteases of Malaria Parasite Plasmodium falciparum: Potential as Antimalarial Drug Targets.

Asrar Alam
Published in: Interdisciplinary perspectives on infectious diseases (2014)
Malaria is a major global parasitic disease and a cause of enormous mortality and morbidity. Widespread drug resistance against currently available antimalarials warrants the identification of novel drug targets and development of new drugs. Malarial proteases are a group of molecules that serve as potential drug targets because of their essentiality for parasite life cycle stages and feasibility of designing specific inhibitors against them. Proteases belonging to various mechanistic classes are found in P. falciparum, of which serine proteases are of particular interest due to their involvement in parasite-specific processes of egress and invasion. In P. falciparum, a number of serine proteases belonging to chymotrypsin, subtilisin, and rhomboid clans are found. This review focuses on the potential of P. falciparum serine proteases as antimalarial drug targets.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • protein kinase
  • life cycle
  • drug induced
  • adverse drug
  • human health
  • emergency department
  • risk factors
  • cardiovascular disease
  • cardiovascular events
  • risk assessment