Collateral hypersensitivity between ZY19489 and piperaquine neutralizes PfCRT-mediated drug efflux and Plasmodium falciparum resistance.

  • Journal Article
  • Preprint

Journal:
Research square
Published:
October 9, 2025
PMID:
41282051
Authors:
David Fidock D, John Okombo J, Tolla Ndiaye T, Tarrick Qahash T, Igor Moura I, Eva Gil-Iturbe E, Laura Hagenah L, Jessica Bridgford J, Vinicius Bonatto V, Kurt Ward K, Tomas Yeo T, Sunil Narwal S, Lily Orta L, Isla Anderson I, Satish Kumar Dhingra SK, Charisse Pasaje C, Heekuk Park H, Jonathan Kim J, Rafael Guido R, Iñigo Angulo-Barturen I, Jacquin Niles J, Filippo Mancia F, Anne-Catrin Uhlemann AC, Sachel Mok S, Matthias Quick M, Elizabeth Winzeler E, Didier Leroy D, Manuel Llinás M, Vandana Thathy V
Abstract:

New antimalarial drugs are essential to combat the current emergence and spread of Plasmodium falciparum parasite resistance to first-line artemisinin-based combination therapies. Here, we identify a mechanism of parasite resistance to ZY19489, a triaminopyrimidine currently in a Phase IIb clinical trial. Low-grade resistance was mediated by a novel mutation in the P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter PfCRT, which caused a major reduction in asexual blood stage parasite growth rates and a substantial fitness cost. Parasites resistant to ZY19489 lost their chloroquine resistance status and became hypersusceptible to the artemisinin-based combination partner drug piperaquine. All three agents were shown to interfere with parasite-mediated catabolism of host hemoglobin. Uptake studies in PfCRT-containing proteoliposomes provide evidence that ZY19489 can block mutant PfCRT-mediated efflux of piperaquine and chloroquine, creating a scenario of an evolutionary trap whereby resistance to ZY19489 blocks PfCRT efflux-mediated resistance and restores susceptibility to piperaquine and chloroquine. Metabolomic studies revealed that ZY19489 significantly reduces intracellular levels of short hemoglobin-derived peptides (a natural substrate of PfCRT) and leads to higher accumulation of pyrimidine deoxynucleotides. Our data present a marker for tracking the evolution of clinical resistance to ZY19489 and a rationale for pairing this with piperaquine to generate a novel resistance-refractory combination.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine