Plasmodiumfalciparum protein kinase 6 and hemozoin formation are inhibited by a type II human kinase inhibitor exhibiting antimalarial activity.

  • Journal Article

Journal:
Cell chemical biology, Volume: 32, Issue: 7
Published:
July 17, 2025
PMID:
40628257
Authors:
Flore Nardella F, Tiantian Jiang T, Lushun Wang L, Monica J Bohmer MJ, Subhoja Chakraborty S, John Okombo J, Jaeson Calla J, Tatiane Macedo Silva TM, Samuel Pazicky S, Jianwei Che J, Jin Jeon J, Evie Vincent E, Nonlawat Boonyalai N, Rachael Coyle R, Mairi J Buchanan MJ, Samuel Schaefer S, Daisy Chen D, Amaan Khan A, Emily Mayville E, Mariana Laureano De Souza ML, Mayland Treat M, Jordan Charlton J, Patrick K Tumwebaze PK, Seth Tjia S, Lukas Montejo L, Karen Cover K, Philip J Rosenthal PJ, Roland A Cooper RA, Zbynek Bozdech Z, Marcus C S Lee MCS, Ratna Chakrabarti R, Sanjay A Desai SA, David A Fidock DA, Jinhua Wang J, Nathanael S Gray NS, Elizabeth A Winzeler EA, Debopam Chakrabarti D
Abstract:

Kinase inhibitors are potent therapeutics, but most essential Plasmodium kinases remain unexploited as antimalarial targets. We identified compound 12, a type II kinase inhibitor based on aminopyridine and 2,6-benzimidazole scaffolds, as a lead compound with nanomolar potency, fast action, and in vivo activity in the Plasmodium berghei rodent malaria model. Three-hybrid luciferase fragment complementation, enzymatic studies, and cellular thermal shift assays implicated Plasmodium protein kinase 6 (PfPK6) as the target. However, conditional knockdown of PfPK6 did not alter 12 potency, suggesting complex mechanisms of action. In vitro selection for compound 12 resistance revealed mutations in three transporters: multidrug-resistance protein 1, chloroquine resistance transporter and V-type ATPase, indicating a digestive vacuole site of action. Compound 12 inhibited β-hematin and hemozoin formation while increasing free heme levels, suggesting antimalarial activity via blockade of heme detoxification. Our studies repurpose a safe human kinase inhibitor as a potent, fast-acting antimalarial with established in vivo efficacy.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine