(+)-SJ733, a clinical candidate for malaria that acts through ATP4 to induce rapid host-mediated clearance of Plasmodium

  • Jiménez-Díaz, María Belén
  • Ebert, Daniel
  • Salinas, Yandira
  • Pradhan, Anupam
  • Lehane, Adele M.
  • Myrand-Lapierre, Marie-Eve
  • O'Loughlin, Kathleen G.
  • Shackleford, David M.
  • de Almeida, Mariana Justino
  • Carrillo, Angela K.
  • Clark, Julie A.
  • Dennis, Adelaide S.M.
  • Diep, Jonathan
  • Deng, Xiaoyan
  • Duffy, Sandra
  • Endsley, Aaron N.
  • Fedewa, Greg
  • Guiguemde, W. Armand
  • Gómez, María G.
  • Holbrook, Gloria
  • Horst, Jeremy
  • Kim, Charles C.
  • Liu, Jian
  • Lee, Marcus C.S.
  • Matheny, Amy
  • Santos Martinez, Maria
  • Miller, Gregory
  • Rodríguez-Alejandre, Ane
  • Sanz, Laura
  • Sigal, Martina
  • Spillman, Natalie J.
  • Stein, Philip D.
  • Wang, Zheng
  • Zhu, Fangyi
  • Waterson, David
  • Knapp, Spencer
  • Shelat, Anang
  • Avery, Vicky M.
  • Fidock, David A.
  • Gamo, Francisco-Javier
  • Charman, Susan A.
  • Mirsalis, Jon C.
  • Ma, Hongshen
  • Ferrer, Santiago
  • Kirk, Kiaran
  • Angulo-Barturen, Iñigo
  • Kyle, Dennis E.
  • Derisi, Joseph L.
  • Floyd, David M.
  • Guy, R. Kiplin
Publication date
December 2014

Abstract

Drug discovery for malaria has been transformed in the last 5 years by the discovery of many new lead compounds identified by phenotypic screening. The process of developing these compounds as drug leads and studying the cellular responses they induce is revealing new targets that regulate key processes in the Plasmodium parasites that cause malaria. We disclose herein that the clinical candidate (+)-SJ733 acts upon one of these targets, ATP4. ATP4 is thought to be a cation-transporting ATPase responsible for maintaining low intracellular Na+ levels in the parasite. Treatment of parasitized erythrocytes with (+)-SJ733 in vitro caused a rapid perturbation of Na+ homeostasis in the parasite. This perturbation was followed by profound physical...

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